EUROPEAN TORTURE COMMITTEE PRESENTS DAMNING INDICTMENT OF IRISH PRISON SYSTEM
10th February 2011
MEDIA
RELEASE
The fifth report on Ireland from the Council of Europe
Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Degrading Treatment (CPT),
published today (Thursday, 10th Feb 2011), is the most critical yet,
and a damning indictment of a prison system that is failing to meet the most
basic human rights standards of safe and humane custody. The Irish Penal Reform
Trust (IPRT), Ireland’s leading penal reform campaign organisation, is calling
on all election candidates to take heed of this national disgrace and commit to
rectifying the many human rights issues identified in the report, including
slopping out, overcrowding, escalating violence, patchy provision of health
care including mental health care, and above all, the failure to provide safe
custody.
During the CPT’s last visit to Ireland, which took place
from 25th January to 5th February 2010, the Committee
also examined detention in Garda stations and psychiatric institutions.
However, the bulk of the report is given over to detailing the appalling human
rights issues in Ireland’s prisons. The critical issues of prison healthcare
and complaints receive particularly serious censure.
Speaking on the publication of the report, Liam Herrick,
Executive Director of the Irish Penal Reform Trust said:
“This report further documents
a prison system in crisis, with clear failures in many important aspects of the
system – including in relation to healthcare, prisoner protection and
investigation of complaints against staff. Undoubtedly some of the
problems identified here stem from chronic prison overcrowding and inadequate
penal policies, but many of the most serious issues highlight failures at an
operational level to meet the most basic standards of safe and humane custody.”
“This report shows a litany of
broken commitments and inaction in relation to chronic problems over the past
two decades. There has been a failure of leadership to address the
problems within our prisons. The bottom line is that prisoners and the general
public are left with a prison system that is unacceptable and which has exposed
Ireland to international shame. The next Government must prioritise
addressing the problems in our prisons, and commit to getting prisoner numbers
down.”
There were 3,150 prisoners in custody when the CPT visited
in October 2006; this number had reached 4,100 on the occasion of the CPT’s
2010 visit to Ireland. On 25th January 2011, prisoner numbers were
4,541. Efforts being taken by the Irish Prison Service to address the
issues cannot succeed unless Government take control of the overcrowding
situation, which frustrates any attempts to tackle the serious problems
outlined in this report.
Individual Prisons
Cork, Mountjoy and Limerick
female prisons come in for particular criticism:
- Cork: the CPT found plastic bags being
used as toilets (paragraph 41), unacceptable dirty segregation cells (96) and
inadequate visiting facilities (99). Prisoners also reported only being
able to access one shower and change of underwear each week. The State’s
response to these criticisms referred to the proposed new prison at Kilworth -
a plan which is now acknowledged to be suspended indefinitely.
- Limerick female prison: the CPT found
women having to sleep two to a bed because of chronic overcrowding. They
also found blocked showers and flooding in cells (42)
- Mountjoy prison: the persistent problems
of overcrowding in chronic conditions were reinforced by the CPT, who found the
prison in an overall poor state of repair (45). The criteria for placement at
Mountjoy for those prisoners not deemed vulnerable was “available space, or
even floor space”.
- St. Patrick’s
Institution: The CPT was concerned at the
length of time prisoners were spending in their cells and the high number of
prisoners not engaged in any meaningful activity (52)
Critical
Issues
Among other issues, the Committee
found:
- Complaints: Some of the most
serious concerns in the report relate to allegations of mistreatment of
prisoners by staff, where the Committee points to inadequate investigation
of complaints, poor recording of alleged incidents, and inadequate or no
medical examination of prisoners who make complaints. (30-31; 34) Clearly
there is a major deficit of oversight and accountability, and this report
highlights how an independent system of investigation is needed, similar
to that which now prevails for Garda custody. (102-105)
- Prison health care: the CPT found
inadequate provision of prison healthcare, recording that in some prisons
doctors were not fulfilling contracted hours, even where these hours were
already wholly inadequate. Serious concerns also expressed about
prescribing methadone at Cork, Midlands, Mountjoy (74). Some particularly
worrying incidents were reported in relation to inadequate treatment of a HIV
positive prisoner (63); of a prisoner being chained to staff during medical
treatment in the Midlands (65); and of a prisoner being forced to undergo
withdrawal from heroin while subjected to slopping out in Cork (75). Overall
the keeping of medical records was found to be inadequate (67), with prisoners
not receiving medical examination on admission at Cork or Mountjoy (68 and 70)
– this has very serious implications for investigating any allegations of
mistreatment.
- Risk Assessment: Across the prison
system, the Committee found no basic admission or induction policy in place
(except at Midlands prison) including no cell-share risk assessment procedure –
which is especially worrying given serious incidents, including homicide, in
shared cells in recent years.
- Slopping out: the CPT rejected the
State’s contention that toilet patrols operated effectively, and reported that
they found prisoners were often not allowed out of cells at night and reported
being subjected to verbal abuse when they asked for access to toilets (48)
- Psychiatric care: the CPT found mental
health care to be inadequate, particularly in Cork where there was poor record
keeping, over-reliance on medication and dirty observation cells. They report
on one case in Wheatfield prison, where a prisoner was held in a special
observation cell for 6 weeks and worsened in condition during that time.
- Protection and punishment: The report
contains a shocking description of the high numbers on 23-hour lock up for
protection (56), including high numbers in St. Patrick’s Institution
(57). The CPT also found improper use of special observation cells for
discipline (81), including an incident where a disciplinary hearing took place
in a special observation cell while prisoner in underpants. It found
routine use of de facto solitary confinement being imposed for up to 60 days,
which is illegal under the Prisons Act.
- Racism: concerns raised in the report
which had not appeared in previous reports include accounts of allegations of
racism against Travellers and foreign prisoners by staff and other prisoners
(29, 32.)
For all media enquiries, or to arrange an interview with Liam Herrick,
contact:
Fíona Ní
Chinnéide, Campaigns & Communications Officer, Irish
Penal Reform Trust
T: + 353 1 874 1400
E: communications@iprt.ie
The CPT report also details
concerns with regard to Garda Detention and Psychiatric Detention.
- For comment on Garda
issues, please contact the Irish Council for Civil Liberties: Walter
Jayawardene, Communications Officer - 087-9981574
- For comment on the
issues relating to psychiatric detention, please contact the Irish
Mental Health Alliance, c/o Amnesty International: Pippa Woolnough,
Communications Officer (Mental Health) - 085-8353757
Notes for Editors
1. Council of Europe Committee
on the Prevention of Torture and Degrading Treatment (CPT)
The CPT reports on visits to
Ireland along with the Government’s response are published here.
2. Ombudsman for Children: Young People in St
Patrick’s Institution
On 9th Feb 2011, the Ombudsman for Children
published a hard-hitting and comprehensive report following consultations with
children held in St Patrick’s Institution.
- The report is available here.
- IPRT’s comment on the OCO report is available here
3. Prison Figures:
- On 25th Jan 2011, the prison population was 4,541
(Source: Irish Prison Service)
- On 2nd February 2011, there were 41
boys in St Patrick’s Institution: 6 sixteen-year olds; 35 seventeen-year
olds. (Source: Irish Prison Service)
- On 17th Dec 2010, 1,003 men were required
to slop out in Irish prisons: 515 in Mountjoy Prison; 299 prisoners in Cork
prison, all in shared cells (sharing with 1-2 others); 51 in Portlaoise Prison;
99 in Limerick Prison (male).
(Source: Dáil Question, 27th Jan 2011)
- On 26th January 2011, there were 250
prisoners on 23-hour or more lock-up (for reasons of protection); 26
on 22-23 hour lock-up; 164 on 20-22 hr lock-up (including 57 in St Patrick’s
Institution) and 60 on 18-20 hr lock-up.
(Source: Dáil Question, 27th January 2011)
4. IPRT Briefing on Sanitation
and Slopping Out in Irish prisons
IPRT has outlined our serious concerns about the ongoing
practice of slopping out, which is inhuman and degrading, in a short (2-page)
Briefing
5. Irish Penal Reform Trust (IPRT): IPRT is Ireland's leading
non-governmental organisation campaigning for the rights of everyone in prison
and the progressive reform of Irish penal policy, with prison as a last resort: