Taxpayers
in the United Kingdom are to foot the bill to revamp jails in Nigeria and
Jamaica so that the convicts in British prisons can be deported without
breaching their human rights. This is the latest move by the UK’s coalition
government to persuade foreign convicts to serve their sentences at home. It
was revealed that a project is currently on-going in Nigeria which supports the
provision of “human rights training for prison officers” while another project
will construct new facilities at a women’s prison in Lagos, to reduce
overcrowding. The report also claimed that funds were currently being spent in
Jamaica to “assist Jamaican authorities in modernizing their prison service and
rehabilitation and reintegration activities.” Jamaica tops the list of the
nations with most prisoners in British jails, with 900 inmates, followed by
Poland-750, Republic of Ireland-737 and Nigeria, with 594 inmates. “Ministers
have resorted to the tactic – designed to satisfy the human rights of inmates –
after it emerged that the UK’s own prison system has turned into a ‘United
Nations of crime” the British Tabloid reported on its website. Research by the
House of Commons library reveals how British jails contain inmates from 156
countries and the total number of foreign prisoners is rising despite pledges
by the Prime Minister, David Cameron to address the issue. It is estimated that
by March 2012, there were 11,127 foreign inmates behind bars, at an estimated
cost to the UK public purse of more than £420m. This is up from 10,778 in 2011.
The convicts, which includes rapists, murderers and burglars, now make up more
than one in every eight convicts. The figures were disclosed as the British
Prime Minister faced more criticism on Wednesday over his foreign aid
commitments. Cameron was taking part in a radio phone-in when a pensioner
called to tell him it was wrong that she was denied a cancer drug while billions
were spent on overseas aid. Meanwhile, it emerged that the dire need to create
space in the packed jails has prompted ministers to take the extraordinary step
of establishing a £3m annual pot to make it easier for convicts to serve their
sentences back home.
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