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Page 23 - ப்ரிஸந் சீர்திருத்தம் நம்பிக்கை News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Plan to build hundreds more cells in women s prisons | Somerset County Gazette

Missed opportunities over rehabilitating young adult prisoners – report

Missed opportunities over rehabilitating young adult prisoners – report January 20, 2021, 12:05 am The report claimed most young adults are held in adult prisons without any coherent strategy (Niall Carson/PA) Haphazard ways of dealing with young adult prisoners must be urgently addressed to cut reoffending rates, a watchdog has warned. The chief inspector of prisons said there had been missed opportunities in helping criminals aged 18 to 25 rehabilitate, which could put the public at risk of them offending again on release. In a report, Charlie Taylor said changes must be made to the way the 15,000 young adult inmates are dealt with. Currently the majority are held in adult prisons, despite warnings made more than a decade ago of the problems this could cause.

South Wales women more likely to end up in prison than rest of UK

File photo dated 2/6/1998 of a female prison officer checks on inmates at Holloway Prison. WOMEN across South Wales were given 340 prison sentences last year – the highest across England and Wales. The 340 is equal to 62 people in every 100,000 who live in the area. This is down on the 2018 figure of 362, which stood at 67 per 100,000 but still much higher than the rest of England and Wales. And it is seven times the rate of female imprisonment in Surrey – at just nine per 100,000.  But all of these women are in prisons outside Wales as all jails in the country are male-only.  The Prison Reform Trust said that unnecessary imprisonment of women remained a ‘postcode lottery’ and found the figures showed a clear, significant geographical divide.

It can be devastating : More than 120 women jailed in Hampshire last year

How the Persecution of Julian Assange by the British Authorities has relied upon Complicity -- Society s Child -- Sott net

Thu, 24 Dec 2020 00:00 UTC This is the second article published in The Indicter that looks at how Julian Assange, founder of Wikileaks, journalist, publisher, nominee of the Nobel Peace prize and winner of multiple awards for journalism and human rights, was held in effective solitary confinement for several months while in the healthcare unit of high security Belmarsh prison between April 2019 and January 2020. © Marcello Ferrada de Noli “Waiting for his liberty”, oil on canvasSince the publication of How British Authorities Circumvent the Treaty against Torture - Revelations from Assange s Extradition Hearing , answers received from the prison authorities (HMPPS) to a Freedom of Information (FOI) request provide further indication that the treatment of Assange while in the healthcare unit was unlawful

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