“I do harm to people”. That’s how a Portuguese judge responds when asked what he does for a living, or so he told a meeting on alternatives to prison this week in the beautiful university city of Coimbra. But surely, only for the good of society, his surprised questioners tend to follow up. To which he replies “Sometimes, but sometimes not”.
Punishing people should leave you “with a heavy heart and
burnt hands,” he told us. While some of his colleagues on the bench are unlikely
to share this wisdom (or his way with words), the judge’s comments typify a long-standing
humanistic approach in Portuguese criminal justice - the country was the first
to abolish both the death penalty in 1867 and the sentence of life imprisonment
not long after.
More recently, it has led the way on drug
decriminalisation and enacted emergency powers to release 2,000 people
from prison during the 2020 Covid wave- almost a sixth of the total. No
prisoners died from the disease and there was apparently relatively little
re-offending by those freed early.
Some have argued that this makes the case for seeking to
reduce prison numbers permanently. The judge was certainly in favour of
lowering punishment levels and making community service much more central to
sentencing so that prison numbers are more in keeping with Portugal’s fourth place
ranking in the 2021
Global Peace Index. He questioned whether non-custodial penalties should continue
to be anchored so heavily to prison in the law. Most of those serving them are subject
to jail terms which have been replaced or suspended in one way or another.
The three-day training event for judges, lawyers and
probation officers, organised by the University and Penal
Reform International forms part of an EU funded project Promoting
non-discriminatory alternatives to imprisonment across Europe (PRIAltEur). Other activities
include a comparative study of penal practice in EU member states – (cue wry
smiles in my direction during the presentation when participants were reminded
that the UK is not included).
A pilot scheme to improve access to psychiatric services for
people on probation is also being developed in the ambit of PRIAltEur. Portugal’s
national coordinator for mental health is enthusiastic about including people
in conflict with the law in his ambitious plans to transform the service.
Several contributors seem rather
proud of Portugal’s penal law and policy, while being the first to acknowledge
that implementation on the ground can be another story. The Council of Europe’s
torture watchdog has roundly criticised overcrowding and very poor conditions
in the country’s ageing local prisons, though welcomed some progress when they visited in 2019. They will be back later
this year.
As for wider society, UN bodies have been
concerned about racism both towards Roma and people of African descent.
Meaningful discussions at the meeting about racial disparities in criminal
justice were prevented by a total absence of information. The Constitution
prohibits the collection of data that are disaggregated by race or ethnicity. The UN’s Human Rights
Committee worry this hampers the ability to further combat discrimination.
On community penalties at
least, probation is embracing a balanced package comprising structured
treatment programmes, relationship based practice and new technology. But probation
officers carry an average caseload of 70, and while the conference heard about
some impressive work by established ngo O Companheiro, civil society involvement
in penal matters is relatively limited.
Portugal has for now at least avoided
a descent into populist politics which invariably brings a more hard-line
approach to crime and sentencing in its wake. For how long?
Right wing nationalist party “Chega”,
meaning “Enough”, won 12 seats in January’s parliamentary election, campaigning
for life imprisonment and chemical
castration. Its founder and leader Andre Ventura has criticised the Covid
prisoner amnesty. Ironically, Ventura, is a former law professor, (though not at
Coimbra) , whose doctoral
thesis criticised penal populism and the stigmatisation of minorities.
The judge at our conference
told us that he and his judicial colleagues should “run away from prison
sentences as the devil runs from the cross.” As we well know, politicians, or
many of them, choose to run in the very opposite direction.
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