The prisons inspectorate (HMIP) published its first
ever report on Separation Centres for terrorist prisoners today. First established
five years ago, there are currently centres at Frankland and Woodhill high
security prisons with a mothballed unit at Full Sutton. Their aim is to prevent
prisoners with extreme views from radicalising others in the mainstream prison population,
planning terrorist acts or disrupting good order in the prison.
Because the use of the
centres “has
never fully taken off” , Prison inspectors possibly haven’t thought it
worth their while to visit up until now. It's true that there are only 28 places in the
three prisons, with only nine prisoners in the functioning units during April’s
inspection visit. In fact there have only been 15 held in the centres over the
last 5 years, all Muslim men; and only
21 referred for placement between 2017 and the end of last year. These are much smaller numbers than are held in the longer established Close Supervision Centres (CSC) which hold prisoners posing
But the Separation Centres should really have been inspected sooner, certainly
well before the Government decided that they, along with the CSCs, should
be more widely used. Separation Centres also hold some of the most challenging and dangerous prisoners in the system, who
are rightly subject to high levels of security and control. These can inevitably
raise human rights concerns. Prisoners at Woodhill have in the past made allegations
that institutional racism caused the Prison Service to establish such units
only for Muslim prisoners.
Not least as the body leading the National Preventive Mechanism
(NPM) which focuses attention on practices in detention that could amount
to ill-treatment, HMIP should have taken more of an interest. Their inspections
are based on international human rights standards, and according to the
Ministry of Justice, some prisoners have used the Human Rights Act to frustrate
their placement in a Separation Centre. Tellingly however, “the
decision to locate a prisoner in one of the centres is part of wider national
security and, as such, not within the remit of the Chief Inspector of Prisons
to comment on”.
Making it easier for the prison service to use the centres
in the future followed recommendations to that effect earlier this year from Jonathan Hall QC,
the Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation (who I was surprised to discover
is also a member of the NPM). Hall’s
report on Terrorism
in prisons implied the centres were underused, blaming a low referral rate on
an undue focus on the damage that separation might cause to the individual’s
rehabilitation, with insufficient attention to the wider benefits of removing a
radicalising individual from the wing.
As for the centres themselves, Hall was perhaps a little unwise
to rely on a 2019 process
study, undertaken entirely from a staff perspective, to conclude that
regimes were “comprehensive in meeting the needs of the men and ensuring
individuals were not disadvantaged by being separated”. In the study, "staff
reported working tirelessly to provide a regime comparable to that provided in
the main prison.”
Three years on, inspectors paint a more troubling picture. At
Frankland “prisoners had collectively decided not to engage with the regime”
and Woodhill’s day to day regime was often curtailed by serious staffing
shortages. The decision by staff and leaders in both jails to describe the
centres as “just another wing” meant that “opportunities were missed to think
more creatively about how to work with prisoners”.
It’s encouraging that in today’s report, the inspectorate find
outcomes to be good on safety- no violence was recorded in the year to April -
and reasonably good on respect. But it’s puzzling that they rate management as
reasonably good when “Governors and the separation centre management committee
did not have a jointly agreed strategy and action plan, setting out the
centres’ specific function that could be understood and acted on by staff”.
Less surprising is that work on “progression” - how prisoners
can get back to normal location in the main prison- was not sufficiently good. Most men refused to take part in formal risk
reduction work, which made it difficult to identify any changes in behaviour which
would evidence a case for ‘deselection’ from the centre.
Even with
a new policy leading to an increased number in Separation Centres and the likely
re-opening of the Full Sutton unit, dispersal will rightly remain the predominant
approach, with concentration reserved for the most dangerous few. For as the
UN has said, keeping violent extremist prisoners separate from the general
prison population can generate as well as reduce risks, elevating their status
in their own and other prisoners’ eyes, reinforcing radicalised attitudes and/or enhancing rejection or stigmatization.
Hall is right that public confidence in the criminal justice
system is shaken if terrorism occurs in prison or if people enter prison only
to come out more dangerous; and the ability of prisons to function is gravely
degraded if prison officers fear imminent terrorist attack. Finding the best
way to prevent these outcomes must be a priority.
But as
the UN has said, there is no one right answer to dealing with terrorist
prisoners. What’s needed is more evidence about the effects of the Separation
Centres and of other ways of accommodating them in England and Wales. Today’s
report makes a welcome if overdue start to collecting it.
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