Irish Penal Reform Trust

Sunday Mirror: Ireland lagging on jail privacy

6th February 2011

In the Irish Sunday Mirror, Samuel Hamilton reports on new figures which reveal that almost half of the men held in Irish prisons must use the toilet in front of other prisoners.1,866 prisoners were forced to go without privacy in December 2010, around 42% of the jail population at the time.

[These figures refer to those who had to use in-cell sanitation in front of others; the numbers do not include those who had to slop out in front of others.]

The article quotes Liam Herrick of the Irish Penal Reform Trust:

"It is clearly a blight on the prison system here and it has not been afforded any political priority."

Minister for Justice, Brendan Smith is also quoted on the "major progress" in recent years in terms of addressing and eliminating the problems presented by slopping out.

The reality is that over 18 years since the CPT first raised serious concerns about this inhumane and degrading practice in Irish prisons, 28% of prison accommodation does not have in-cell sanitation.

Read more:

Our work is supported by

Respect for rights in the penal system with prison as a last resort.

Subscribe

Legal

Contact us

This website uses cookies to provide a good browsing experience

Some are necessary to help our website work properly and can't be switched off, and some are optional. Click on "Choose cookies" below for more information on the cookies being used on this website. Please note that based on your settings, not all functions of the website may be available. You can manage your preferences by visiting “Cookie preferences" at the bottom of any page.

This website uses cookies to provide a good browsing experience

Some are necessary to help our website work properly and can't be switched off, and some are optional. Please choose the cookies to allow below. Please note that based on your settings, not all functions of the website may be available. You can manage your preferences by visiting “Cookie preferences" at the bottom of any page.

Your cookie preferences have been saved.