In Britain, a jail sentence is often a death sentence. What’s going on in our prisons? | Deborah Coles and Jessica Pandian
Last year, 371 people died behind closed doors. We want justice for them – and an end to a cruel, complacent system
- Deborah Coles is the executive director of Inquest; Jessica Pandian is a policy and research officer
Britain has the most draconian prison system in western Europe. Recent deaths in police custody have increased public consciousness of state violence and its relationship to institutional racism and sexism. And yet we are still often oblivious to the inherently harmful and too often fatal consequences of imprisonment that affect our most vulnerable people beyond the scrutiny of the general public.
Last year, 371 people in England and Wales died in prison behind closed doors – the highest death toll since records began. Yet, despite this, there has been near silence on the issue. On the few occasions when prison deaths have garnered attention on a national scale, they have often been dismissed and even rationalised on account of the status of those who die as prisoners – as if they deserved what was coming to them.
Deborah Coles is the executive director of Inquest, an independent charity working with families bereaved by state-related deaths; Jessica Pandian is a policy and research officer
from The Guardian https://ift.tt/slduM0K
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