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Overflowing Brit jails to release criminals

As the number of prisoners rose to an unprecedented 82,068, jails in the UK have been declared absolutely full. This has happened for the first time in history.

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The government is contemplating the release of thousands of convicts serving terms for non-heinous crimes so as to make some space in the over populated prisons. As many as 16,000 inmates were released last june

LONDON: As the number of prisoners rose to an unprecedented 82,068, jails in the UK have been declared absolutely full. This has happened for the first time in history.

The government was contemplating to release thousands of burglars, muggers and other convicts serving terms for non-heinous crimes to help make some space in the over populated prisons. The rush was so much that even the court and police cells were packed.

A Ministry of Justice statement revealed that the total operational capacity— based on governors’ advice on what is safe for ‘’control, security and proper operation’’— is only 81,972, including more than 350 places in police cells and courts.

The government was considering to extend the End of Custody License — an early release scheme under which prisoners gets out of jail 18 days before their sentence reaches even the halfway point.

Justice Secretary Jack Straw has urged magistrates to give fewer prison terms and prefer community punishments, wherever possible. But, the magistrates have refused, saying they would continue  to hand down whatever sentence they saw fit.

As many as 16,000 inmates were released early under the ECL last June. An extension of the License would free space in the jails but was likely to hit the ruling Labour party’s reputation on law and order. Officials at the Ministry of Justice, however, believe all other options have been exhausted.

In the past week alone, they have bussed scores of inmates to open jails and announced a scheme to send foreign offenders home nine months early. But the panic measures
have either come too late or achieved too little.

‘’The prisons are not safe. We have increased numbers yet again with no change in regime and no increase in staffing. This is risk management at the highest level,’’ the Daily Mail quoted Colin Moses of Prison Officers’ Association as saying.

The government has promised to build an extra 14,000 prison places by 2014, including giant Titan jails holding 2,500 inmates, but prison population are already soaring above
projections.

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