Inside News / FRFI 211 Oct / Nov 2009
No compassion
On 20 August terminally-ill Libyan prisoner Abdel Baset Al Megrahi was released from prison in
No care
On 23 September a coroner condemned the ‘appalling and unacceptable conditions’ at privately-run Rye Hill prison where Alexsey Baranovsky bled to death in 2006. While medical care in state prisons is provided by the local NHS, private prisons subcontract to private ‘health providers’, such as Primecare, which provided the woefully inadequate service that contributed to Alexsey’s death. He was the third Rye Hill prisoner to die in a 15-month period. The suicide of Michael Bailey in the segregation unit in 2005 led to charges of manslaughter by negligence against three members of staff – the first time prison staff had ever been charged with this offence. The officers were acquitted – their defence being that the whole prison administration was so bad and they had been so poorly trained that they could not be held individually responsible. So why is the private company that is responsible for this disgusting prison not being brought to trial?
No legal advice
In July the Legal Services Commission announced the impending introduction of ‘fixed fees’ (ie big cuts) for legal representation at Parole Board and disciplinary hearings. Immediately these changes were finalised, the Ministry of Justice (MOJ) published a consultation paper, proposing further cuts. Legal Aid: Refocusing on Priority Cases suggests, among other measures, ending virtually all civil legal aid for anyone who is not a
No to censorship of FRFI!
Over the last few months we have had reports of subscribers in prison being refused FRFI; in particular we have had repeated calls and letters from
Dear Sir/Madam
I can confirm that at present HMP Wakefield does not issue the publication Fight Racism, Fight Imperialism; this is due to concerns over the content of some articles within the paper.
I am aware that other establishments within the High Security Estate have, on occasion, decided not to allow offenders copies of particular issues due to their content.
As an example of our concerns, issue 208 has been reviewed by our Operations Department and it contains an article about the Close Supervision Centres in prisons which is clearly inaccurate and misleading. It reinforces negative stereotypes and suggests that staff use excessive force as a matter of course. Nothing could be further from the truth, staff strive to build up relationships with offenders in the CSC and actively encourage them to achieve behavioural targets that are set.
As such, I do not want to commit to censoring each issue for suitability; in essence a publication should either be suitable or not. Given the concerns I have raised, HMP Wakefield does not consider this publication to be appropriate for issue to offenders.
Yours faithfully
S HOWARD, Governor
Ironically, the FRFI article cited as ‘an example of our concerns’ was also published in the widely distributed prisoners’ newspaper Inside Time and will therefore have been read throughout the system. The editor of Inside Time has confirmed to FRFI that the Prison Service did not complain about that article and that, as far as he is aware, no prison banned that issue of Inside Time for any reason.
FRFI is strongly committed to maintaining a readership within prisons and takes all instances of censorship very seriously. We have replied to the
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