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Britain: Prison overcrowding reaches breaking point
By Peter Reydt
26 February 2004
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The prison population in England and Wales has risen to 74,543,
an increase of 2,674 from one year ago, according to figures released
last week.
The rise leaves just 600 spare places in the prison system,
raising the prospect of inmates being held in police cells in
the worst effected areas such as the West Midlands, West Yorkshire
and London, or transported hundreds of miles.
Britain has the highest number of prisoners in Western Europe,
with 141 prisoners for every 100,000 people. The latest figures
mean that the prison population has virtually doubled in the last
25 years as successive governments have implemented draconian
law and order policies. The number of women incarcerated has also
increased dramatically, by 146 percent over the last 10 years,
to 4,463.
The situation has worsened since Labour came to power in 1997.
Under Prime Minister Tony Blair, the number of prisoners has risen
by 24 percent. This is not due to rising crime rates, but to the
readiness of the courts to resort to custodial sentencing for
even minor crimes. First time burglars are twice as likely to
go to jail now as they were eight years ago, whilst the number
of adults serving sentences for less than 12 months is up 160
percent since 1999.
More than half the prisons in England and Wales are officially
classed as overcrowded80 out of 138 jails. Prison reform
campaigners say that 11 have exceeded the maximum safe capacityAshwell
in Rutland, Birmingham, Cardiff, Doncaster, Hull, Lancaster, Leicester,
Lincoln, Stafford, Wandsworth in south London and Wormwood Scrubs
in west London.
The situation is similar in Scotland, where overcrowding is
said to be a problem at all of the countrys 16 jails as
the number of inmates has increased 65 percent over intended capacity.
The Scottish Prison Service said that Craiginches Prison in Aberdeen,
built to hold 155 prisoners, currently holds 250.
The increase has far overstepped all expectations. The projected
figures for 2006 now expect the prison population in England and
Wales to reach 87,2009,500 more than planned for.
Prison overcrowding has the most devastating impact on the
well being of inmates. The annual report for England and Wales
for 2002/2003 by the Chief Inspector of Prisons published earlier
this year, graphically underscored this.
Its main conclusion found that the explosion in prison numbers
was directly related to a staggering rate of suicides and self-harm
in English and Welsh prisons. The Chief Inspector reported, Almost
two people a week kill themselves in our prisons: and they are
the most vulnerable people: often new to prison, with mental health
and substance misuse problems. One in four women in local prisons
self-harms, some repeatedly. In the worst of our overcrowded local
prisons, inmates may spend 23 hours a day in a shared cell with
an unscreened toilet.
Ninety-four inmates committed suicide last year, a doubling
of the 47 suicide cases in 1993. Self-harm in custody has skyrocketted
as well. As reported by the BBC in the first nine months of 2003
there were 12,073 cases of self-harm in England and Wales. That
compares to 4,187 between 1993 and 1994.
A statistical analysis of suicides shows that it is primarily
the most vulnerable prisoners that are prone to take their lives.
Over a third have not been convicted of a crime, 40 percent die
within their first month in custody, and one in five are so disturbed
or mentally ill that they are in hospitals or segregation units
when they kill themselves. A disproportionate number are women.
All local prisons are at the sharp end of overcrowding,
the report points out. Local prisons are stretched to the limits
and often not able to deliver a decent or acceptable
regime. This affects all aspects of prison lifeattitudes
and culture as well as standards of hygiene and cleanliness. The
strain is felt on every level of the prison service. Overcrowding
leads to a situation where virtually no prisoner can be taken
care of properly. New inmates are quickly dispersed to whatever
prison can offer a place and banged up behind bars without even
considering if they have any special needs: are they substance
abusers, do they have any special psychological problems, are
they vulnerable in any other way?
Such is the scale of overcrowding, that Home Secretary David
Blunkett is said to be looking into increasing the use of electronic
tagging. Some 3,500 people are currently on Home Detention Curfew.
The governments criminal policy has been carried out
under the banner of tough on crime, tough on the causes
of crime. Committed to a right-wing big business agenda,
the government has fulfilled the first pledge, but has done nothing
to alleviate the social conditions that cause crime in the first
place. Instead its own policies have contributed to the increase
in the prison population through the rising levels of social inequality.
Many inmates, for example, are in prison for petty offences, such
as non-payment of fines, bills, etc.
The official attitude towards criminal policy, as with every
other area of British social policy, increasingly mirrors that
of the United States. In a society that defined by a deepening
polarisation between rich and poor, this Americanisation will
continue whatever cosmetic changes are made to sentencing policies.
The more life at the lower end of the social strata becomes a
struggle, the more the upper echelons design its policies to control
its population.
See Also:
Protracted torture and abuse
at UK flagship prison
[15 January 2004]
Britain: Youth prison accused
of abuses
[7 January 2004]
Britain: overcrowded
prisons in chaos
[21 August 2003]
Britains prison
population reaches record high
[9 January 2003]
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