tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-45692336969246705252024-02-07T02:31:46.891+00:00Prisoners Voice - The walls have ears we have tonguesThe Official Organ of the Association of Prisonersjailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.comBlogger29125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-88631477432507261912010-07-02T11:44:00.002+01:002010-07-02T11:47:20.599+01:00Call For SupportThursday, July 1, 2010<br /><br /><a href="http://prisonerben.blogspot.com/2010/07/call-for-support.html">Call For Support</a><br /><br />The Association of Prisoners is this generation’s attempt to give prisoners the voice we have long attempted to have heard.<br /><br />Many other groups and organisations exist which play a role in attempting to change the prison system. Some are small and advocate abolition. Some are large, and advocate slow change. Some groups confine their work to specific subgroups of prisoners while others conduct broad based campaigns.<br /><br />Along with the AoP, prison reform groups span the full width of political thought and action. The sole common ground sometimes seems to be dissatisfaction with the status quo.<br /><br />This is a call to put differences aside. Prisoners need your help. In order to function, the Association of Prisoners needs the support of reform groups as well as prisoners themselves.<br /><br />This is a once in a generation opportunity to help form a broad movement which could reshape the landscape of power within prisons and lead to real, positive change.<br /><br />We hope that you can support us, in whichever way you can. At this moment, the immediate need is to spread the word, informing prisoners across the country that there is a group to represent their interests and which encourages them to set up unions in their particular prison.<br /><br />We call on everybody to use their contacts with prisoners, individually or collectively, to pass this call over the walls.<br /><br />Setting Up The Union In Your Prison<br /><br />We want to build the organisation across the country. In each of prison, just one person needs to get to the library and read Article 11 of the ECHR and grasp the legality of what we are doing. Then read the PSO. It is three pages long and most of it is waffle. Ignore the negative tone, as we grow that will change.<br /><br />1. Write to your Governor, informing him that you are setting up a Prisoners Representative Association under Article 11 of the European Convention. Send a copy to your solicitor as well, just to cover your back. Tell the governor that you are open to discussions as to how the association can operate in your particular prison.<br />If the Governor is an idiot, he will hit the roof and instantly break the law by banning the idea of an association. If he has more sense, he will accept the inevitable and, through gritted teeth, have some half-sensible things to say.<br /><br />2. Ask the Governor how he intends to facilitate the Association. You will need to be able to communicate with people on other wings, put up notices and hold meetings and elections. The Governor has to work out how these things can take place.<br /><br />3. Once you have informed the Governor of what you are doing, someone on each wing needs to be able to go from door to door asking people if they would like to join the Association, like to put themselves up for election as a local association leader, and whether they would like to vote for the local leadership. All legal and above board.<br /><br />4. Pass your list of members to Elkan Abrahamson, Jackson & Canter Solicitors or Inside Time, or to myself.<br /><br />5. Come up with a list of issues you wish to campaign about in your prison. Whilst there is a national list of issues the AoP wish to campaign over, it is important that local branches identify.<br /><br />6. Watch this space.<br /><br />Editor's note:<br /><br />The above is a copy of the circular that is being sent around the UK prison population and Ben thought blog readers might be interested.jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-58248811617629246292010-07-01T12:45:00.000+01:002010-07-01T12:46:15.737+01:00Association of Prisoners - National Campaign LaunchAssociation of Prisoners - National Campaign Launch<br /><br />By Ben Gunn<br /><br />Wednesday, June 30, 2010<br /><br />We all know that dealing with PSHQ is task for the unwitting and dim-witted. They are a slippery bunch at the best of times. But PSHQ has been causing the Executive Committee of the AoP a headache for the last year and that has meant that we have been grappling to see the best way forward.<br /><br />After much drinking of tea and several ounces of Old H being consumed in endless little meetings, we have a solution to the problem. Did I mention the problem? Oh, well... When the AoP was first founded by John Hirst, Pete Smith, John Coyne and others the PS accepted the legal reality - they just couldn't stop it happening. For the first time in British penal history, HQ had to find a means of dealing with organising prisoners that didn't involve harassment or brutality. And so lines of negotiations were opened and it looked as if the PS were going to be sensible, just for once.<br /><br />But no. Obviously. They then put out PSO 4480, which told governors that they could ignore us. It also created the stumbling block that has had us scratching our heads for the last year. The PS claims that we cannot have a national association, because prisoners just don't have enough common interests.<br /><br />We hummed. We ahaad. We smoked, drank, argued and banged our heads off many brick walls. Until we found this solution - ignore HQ.<br /><br />We don't care what HQ says. It's as simple as that. Article 11 of the ECHR says we can have an association and so we damn well will. Of course HQ doesn't want to see that happen; they have always hated the idea of cons having any sort of voice, let alone an organised one. Well, tough. We are here and here we stay.<br /><br />We have written to the DG to tell him that we are going national, recruiting members and encouraging prisoners across the country to set up branches in their prison.<br /><br />Instead of us wondering how to deal with HQ, we decided to act and then let HQ decide how to deal with us. And we expect a bit of grumbling, a bit of fancy footwork, and we won't be surprised if they formally ban the AoP. We would welcome the legal fight -that way we can get them into court and skewer them properly.<br />The idea that prisoners don't have common interests is barking mad. Whilst prisoners come in all sorts of shapes and sizes, colours and creeds, genital arrangements and so on, we all share common burdens. We are all prisoners.<br /><br />The PS is a national service, not a loose collective of individual fiefdoms. We all live by the Prison Rules and Prison Service Orders. These instruments increase the weight and depth of the burdens felt by every prisoner no matter in what location or category. When the Minister of Justice has a bad day, we all feel the consequences.<br /><br />That the only, the best, argument that HQ has against the AoP is a claim that prisoners don't have common interests only reveals the desperate corner that they are in. They don't get to decide if prisoners have common interests - prisoners get to decide that. They cannot stop cons organising; that is the law. As long as we don't go around trying to overthrow the system, if they ban us then they will face the legal consequences.jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-30984311500341952332010-02-21T14:45:00.000+00:002010-02-21T14:46:44.856+00:00Government in U Turn on prisoners’ votesAssociation of Prisoners<br /><br />Contact: John Hirst FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE<br />Tel: (01482) 341281 or 07766964583<br />Email: john.hirst@myhaven.karoo.co.uk<br /><br />Government in U Turn on prisoners’ votes<br /><br />Jack Straw gives declaration to implement Euro Court ruling<br /><br />The Association of Prisoners (AoP) welcomes the government’s declaration to comply fully with its obligations under the European Convention to abide by the Convention and European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) decisions.<br /><br />The declaration was made between 18-19 February, in Interlaken, Switzerland, at a Ministerial Conference organised by the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, which was attended by Ministers of the 47 Member States within the Council of Europe.<br /><br />The main purpose of the Ministerial Conference was to push forward proposed reforms to the ECtHR. A major problem being that the Court is overburdened with the amount of applications by citizens alleging human rights violations by Member States. Another problem being the Committee of Ministers role of supervising enforcement of the Court’s decisions; and Member States choosing to ignore the decisions of the Court as being final.<br /><br />Because the Russian Minister of Justice Alexander Konovalov has ratified Article 14 of the Convention, it means that the Prisoners Votes Case can progress to the Final Resolution stage with the Committee of Ministers, and Jack Straw, the Secretary of State for Justice, is powerless to prevent the inevitable. It maybe a bitter pill to swallow, but swallow it he did.<br /><br />Had the UK not climbed down when it did, the UK would have been suspended from both the Council of Europe and European Union in March. The Lisbon Treaty brought together the Court, Council of Europe, and European Union under one large umbrella. It now means that s.3 of the Representation of the People Act 1983, which bars all convicted prisoners from voting, can no longer be relied upon by the UK government because international law and European law now take precedence over English law.<br /><br />Ends<br /><br />Notes for editors<br /><br /><a href="https://wcd.coe.int/ViewDoc.jsp?Ref=PR145%282010%29&Language=lanEnglish&Ver=original&Site=DC&BackColorInternet=F5CA75&BackColorIntranet=F5CA75&BackColorLogged=A9BACE">https://wcd.coe.int/ViewDoc.jsp?Ref=PR145%282010%29&Language=lanEnglish&Ver=original&Site=DC&BackColorInternet=F5CA75&BackColorIntranet=F5CA75&BackColorLogged=A9BACE<br /></a>jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-31852256742341701112010-02-15T16:52:00.002+00:002010-02-15T16:55:50.549+00:00Prisoners threaten to sue in voting rights row<a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/prisoners-threaten-to-sue-in-voting-rights-row-1900347.html">Prisoners threaten to sue in voting rights row<br /></a><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">By Jack Doyle, Press Association</span><br /><br />A group of prisoners is threatening to sue the Government for compensation if their members are prevented from voting in the general election.<br /><br />The Association of Prisoners want at least £1,000 for every offender in England and Wales refused voting rights.<br /><br />Five years ago the European Court of Human Rights ruled it was illegal for ministers to deny voting rights to all prisoners.<br /><br />Since then the Government has held two public consultations on the issue but has not changed the law.<br /><br />Prison reform groups made a formal complaint to the Council of Europe accusing ministers of using delaying tactics.<br /><br />Last year Justice Minister Michael Wills confirmed it was "unavoidable" that some inmates would be given voting rights.<br /><br />A policy paper published in April suggested prisoners serving sentences of up to four years could be allowed to vote.<br /><br />That would mean giving voting rights to around a third of the 84,000 currently in custody.<br /><br />Ben Gunn, General Secretary of the Association of Prisoners, said the Government had defied the court for too long.<br /><br />"I deplore the Government's ineptitude. This Government that has locked up more people than any in UK history has the temerity to claim moral authority, whilst acting in bad faith in defiance of implementing the court's judgment," he said.<br /><br />"Criminals will doubtless be glad to know that the rule of law is an optional extra. We will certainly be glad for the compo."<br /><br />Frances Crook, director of the Howard league for Penal Reform, accused ministers of using the issue as a "political football".<br /><br />"Prisoners are absolutely right to fight for their right to vote and I hope the change comes in before the next election," she said.<br /><br />"Ministers have been avoiding this issue for far too long in a bid to look tough on crime, but prisoner voting shouldn't be used as a political football.<br /><br />"Losing one's liberty is punishment in itself. The Government has a duty to encourage civic responsibility, particularly amongst marginalised groups."jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-52017738222963115892010-02-14T16:58:00.000+00:002010-02-14T17:00:10.930+00:00BROWN TO PAY OUT £70M COMPENSATION TO PRISONERSAssociation of Prisoners<br /><br />Contact: John Hirst FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE<br />Tel: (01482) 341281 or 07766964583<br />Email: john.hirst@myhaven.karoo.co.uk<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">BROWN TO PAY OUT £70M COMPENSATION TO PRISONERS</span><br /><br />Prisoners including murderers, rapists and paedophiles to sue for loss of vote<br /><br />The Association of Prisoners (AoP) is to sue the government, in a class action, if it fails to give all convicted prisoners the vote in time for the next general election. The move follows Lord Bach’s statement, in the House of Lords, that it is a matter for individual prisoners to pursue if they feel that they are being denied the vote. In Hirst v UK(No2), the Prisoners Votes Case, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that denying prisoners the vote breached their human rights under Article 3 of the First Protocol of the European Convention.<br /><br />Lawyers acting for the prisoners seek to rely upon a US Supreme Court ruling which decided that the loss of the vote can result in an award of monetary damages by way of compensation. Taking into account the exchange rate for dollars into pounds sterling, each of the 70,000 prisoners is likely to be awarded £1,000 and the bill for the taxpayers will be a staggering £70,000,000!<br /><br />Ben Gunn, General Secretary of the AoP and author of Ben’s Prison Blog, has said: “I deplore the government’s ineptitude. This government that has locked up more people than any in UK history has the temerity to claim moral authority, whilst acting in bad faith in defiance of implementing the Court’s judgment. Criminals will doubtless be glad to know that the rule of law is an optional extra. We will certainly be glad for the compo”.<br /><br />Lord David Ramsbotham, at the Barred from Voting campaign meeting in Parliament last Monday, stated that he intends to raise the serious issue of Lord Bach making a misleading statement in Parliament. In the debate in the House of Lords on prisoners voting, Lord Pannick, in relation to whether the government intended delaying the issue until after the next general election, asked: “Can the Minister give the House an unequivocal assurance that that is no part and has been no part of the Government's motivation?”. Lord Bach replied: “Yes”. However, the outgoing Director General of the National Offender Management Service (NOMS), Phil Wheatley, confirms, along with Martin Bentham, that Jack Straw was the Ministry of Justice source who told the Evening Standard that prisoners won’t be able to vote until after the general election.<br /><br />NOTES FOR EDITORS<br /><br />1. The Association of Prisoners was set up in direct opposition to the Prison Officer’s Association, under Article 11 of the European Convention incorporated in the Human Rights Act 1998. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1367035/Prisoners-in-move-to-set-up-trade-union.html<br />2. Ben Gunn is serving life for murder and is presently located at: HMP Shepton Mallet, Cornhill, Shepton Mallet, Somerset, BA4 5LU Tel: 01749 823 300 Fax: 01749 823 301<br />3. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld200910/ldhansrd/text/91215-0002.htm<br />4. http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23754049-straw-prisoners-wont-be-able-to-vote-until-after-general-election.do<br />5. http://prisonerben.blogspot.com/jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-78664716417553906572009-06-30T11:13:00.002+01:002009-06-30T11:16:06.577+01:00Prisoners Votes Case aired on the radio on Iain Dale's radio showPrisoners Votes Case aired on the radio on Iain Dale's radio show.<br /><br /><a href="http://jailhouselawyersblog.blogspot.com/2009/06/prisoners-votes-case-aired-on-iain-dale.html">Listen here</a>.<br /><br />John Hirst, Jailhouselawyer, appears twice within the first hour.jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-55606628871949321122009-06-22T23:44:00.002+01:002009-06-22T23:59:18.014+01:00Association of Prisoners ConstitutionAssociation of Prisoners Constitution<br /><br /><a title="View img on Scribd" href="http://www.scribd.com/doc/16673039/img" style="margin: 12px auto 6px auto; 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font-family: Helvetica,Arial,Sans-serif; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; font-size: 14px; line-height: normal; font-size-adjust: none; font-stretch: normal; -x-system-font: none; display: block; text-decoration: underline;">img_0008</a> <object codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=9,0,0,0" id="doc_80918535320552" name="doc_80918535320552" classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" align="middle" height="500" width="100%" rel="media:document" resource="http://d.scribd.com/ScribdViewer.swf?document_id=16673097&access_key=key-1q4hz0hbeyv7ph751e9e&page=1&version=1&viewMode=" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/searchmonkey/media/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/terms/" > <param name="movie" value="http://d.scribd.com/ScribdViewer.swf?document_id=16673097&access_key=key-1q4hz0hbeyv7ph751e9e&page=1&version=1&viewMode="> <param name="quality" value="high"> <param name="play" value="true"> <param name="loop" value="true"> <param name="scale" value="showall"> <param name="wmode" value="opaque"> <param name="devicefont" value="false"> <param name="bgcolor" value="#ffffff"> <param name="menu" value="true"> <param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"> <param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always"> <param name="salign" value=""> <embed src="http://d.scribd.com/ScribdViewer.swf?document_id=16673097&access_key=key-1q4hz0hbeyv7ph751e9e&page=1&version=1&viewMode=" quality="high" pluginspage="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer" play="true" loop="true" scale="showall" wmode="opaque" devicefont="false" bgcolor="#ffffff" name="doc_80918535320552_object" menu="true" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" salign="" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" align="middle" height="500" width="100%"></embed> </object>jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-17980680519545357392009-06-16T20:30:00.001+01:002009-06-16T20:32:35.938+01:00ConVerse responseConVerse response<br /><br />By Ben Gunn<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgezMv8VPH9R3do04zJUsUyE7zl7NGjf0SAT-baq9Tvl5ca6g7bTUemQNEYEt56mkqvkGLLcxTV8BXANgu5nkhS9H46G2qCpoCjWxV3GvaeRPIlBXDxgfMa2y6_agVrosfrK_lN16AL0Ew/s1600-h/IMG_0004.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 284px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgezMv8VPH9R3do04zJUsUyE7zl7NGjf0SAT-baq9Tvl5ca6g7bTUemQNEYEt56mkqvkGLLcxTV8BXANgu5nkhS9H46G2qCpoCjWxV3GvaeRPIlBXDxgfMa2y6_agVrosfrK_lN16AL0Ew/s400/IMG_0004.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5348010217764552226" /></a><br />(Click on image to enlarge)jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-69150454947895707642009-06-16T18:27:00.005+01:002009-06-16T18:43:11.093+01:00Mark Leech - The TruthMark Leech - The Truth<br /><br />By Ben Gunn<br /><br />(Click on the images to read)<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEid5hU0divxes_L5zJMbwfhFEqFlYwz9hHYMLwCJ5BNoEHxg_PbJ8Z-xrbYhY-aMyWSfTeWvS09pih-6H593GjaWGszV6K0lI0Utzkt3w5WpZRSCmi04ZH-qVgO0fU3s-Gs9Maagt0utmU/s1600-h/IMG.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 284px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEid5hU0divxes_L5zJMbwfhFEqFlYwz9hHYMLwCJ5BNoEHxg_PbJ8Z-xrbYhY-aMyWSfTeWvS09pih-6H593GjaWGszV6K0lI0Utzkt3w5WpZRSCmi04ZH-qVgO0fU3s-Gs9Maagt0utmU/s400/IMG.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5347979768352546386" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEghd49gCGbPumty6BX_Vy_HkGhYRBDanFLsvDe4yNUUywfuyehtveKjSDPOU2fKcL57bP7jsX_G3dcEQnPSAjL_JNw5O_xJfqvCmsRwf7c77lT0ZmZBY4WinC4qBhiaYp_bWRJIcAbrars/s1600-h/IMG_0001.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 284px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEghd49gCGbPumty6BX_Vy_HkGhYRBDanFLsvDe4yNUUywfuyehtveKjSDPOU2fKcL57bP7jsX_G3dcEQnPSAjL_JNw5O_xJfqvCmsRwf7c77lT0ZmZBY4WinC4qBhiaYp_bWRJIcAbrars/s400/IMG_0001.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5347979261308009682" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjedkl7RTnksNzya6PDJSO9N7FDWPSQZRn56IhLqf7O2Gpj4HxEtmvaoCFI80g-jlpG5NeHujzoSSAgQEGBVyLQ8ciUh6Ddsl0NjDAz9o35q5Tm2wOLzAcyWM-wKqYHDYTOolg99S5PD8g/s1600-h/IMG_0002.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 284px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjedkl7RTnksNzya6PDJSO9N7FDWPSQZRn56IhLqf7O2Gpj4HxEtmvaoCFI80g-jlpG5NeHujzoSSAgQEGBVyLQ8ciUh6Ddsl0NjDAz9o35q5Tm2wOLzAcyWM-wKqYHDYTOolg99S5PD8g/s400/IMG_0002.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5347978919441901138" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEha37xGwpU8PrI9pc6hrPx30tEBkt6iOajhsdZQtxJ5BsQTDGsEuwGUDikKDeqn5qqIvWCgFM7QmwnHUEqOzjGly2aebbY1tP69H2WQ5Rct6AwO56RAZOeFxZlyV8FKCqlgXIXeU6Icf9A/s1600-h/IMG_0003.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 284px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEha37xGwpU8PrI9pc6hrPx30tEBkt6iOajhsdZQtxJ5BsQTDGsEuwGUDikKDeqn5qqIvWCgFM7QmwnHUEqOzjGly2aebbY1tP69H2WQ5Rct6AwO56RAZOeFxZlyV8FKCqlgXIXeU6Icf9A/s400/IMG_0003.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5347978580735796786" /></a>jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-80075816899667412112009-06-10T21:54:00.002+01:002009-06-10T21:59:34.189+01:00Ministry of Justice censors prisoner for fear of offending Osama Bin LadenMinistry of Justice censors prisoner for fear of offending Osama Bin Laden<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnFHGRHjpmbRQGj-3PKQto8Ssf70FBltYZ3-K2j221Em5JLJgLyaywvWFakmRMUaRwFI0trbkRLmvDfeydUNZulkhydQwuRQVm_r8Wi65kxJm2dOjT04NPg6fUzqxdvsePRvmtReJ-sIM/s400/porky.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 200px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnFHGRHjpmbRQGj-3PKQto8Ssf70FBltYZ3-K2j221Em5JLJgLyaywvWFakmRMUaRwFI0trbkRLmvDfeydUNZulkhydQwuRQVm_r8Wi65kxJm2dOjT04NPg6fUzqxdvsePRvmtReJ-sIM/s400/porky.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a><br /><br /><a href="http://wikileaks.org/wiki/Cartoon_censored_from_UK_prisoners_magazine_Inside_Time_for_upsetting_Muslim_prisoners%2C_2009">Cartoon censored from UK prisoners magazine Inside Time for upsetting Muslim prisoners, 2009</a><br /><br />Related link...<br /><br /><a href="http://jailhouselawyersblog.blogspot.com/2009/06/dear-osama-bin-laden.html">From Hull Daily Mail (late edition) In Brief (not online)<br /><br />Prison paper stopped<br /><br />Hull: Almost 50,000 copies of a prisoner newspaper have been pulled from jails across the country after Muslim clerics complained about an article written by a Hull inmate.<br /><br />Andy Thackwray wrote the latest installment of Angry Andy in the Inside Time newspaper.<br /><br />It was a satrical piece that called the international swine flu outbreaks as a botched Al-Qaeda terrorism plot - and carried with it cartoon of Osama Bin Laden with swine flu.<br /><br />However, after several complaints were made by Imams from across the country, the Director General of the National Offender Management Service, Phil Wheatley, asked for the edition to be pulled.</a>jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-67611263202737067242009-06-07T21:23:00.000+01:002009-06-07T21:24:37.218+01:00Committee on PetitionsCommittee on Petitions<br /><br />Committee on Petitions<br />The Chairman<br />Brussels<br />CL/nmh[02-COM.PETI(2009)D/29813]<br /><br />Mr John Hirst<br />Association of Prisoners<br />5 Adderbury Crescent<br />Adderbury Grove<br />UK - HU5 1AT Hull<br />United Kingdom<br /><br />308742 04.06.2009<br /><br />Subject: Petition Nr.0268/2009 (reference to be quoted in all correspondence)<br /><br />Dear Mr Hirst,<br /><br />I would like to inform you that the Committee on Petitions has begun its examination of your petition. The Committee considers the petition to be admissable since the subjectmatter falls within the sphere of activities of the European Union.<br /><br />The committee felt that the issues raised in your petition should be submitted, also, to the Committee in the European Parliament within whose terms of reference it falls and decided as a result to refer it to the Committee on Constitutional Affairs for information.<br /><br />Please note that consideration of your petition by the European Parliament has been concluded and the file is now closed.<br /><br />Yours sincerely,<br />Marcin Libicki<br />Chairman of the Committee on Petitionsjailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-25489023311575440892009-05-02T16:18:00.002+01:002009-05-02T16:23:12.877+01:00Spot the deliberate mistakesSpot the deliberate mistakes<br /><br /><a href="http://jailhouselawyersblog.blogspot.com/2009/05/spot-deliberate-mistakes.html">The Advertising Standards Authority has judged Mark Leech, editor of ConVerse, a rag, to be guilty of fraud in his claims for the circulation figures of his rag.<br /><br />The fraudster Mark Leech has published a fraudulent version of the ASA findings and claims that he was found not guilty.</a>jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-17050376692878659922009-04-29T22:56:00.002+01:002009-04-29T23:00:05.120+01:00Mark Leech and ConVerse proved to be fraudsMark Leech and ConVerse proved to be frauds<br /><br />ASA Adjudications<br /><br />Spyhole Press Ltd t/a ConVerse<br />175 Hill Lane<br />Manchester<br />M9 6RL<br />Number of complaints: 1<br /> <br />Date: 29 April 2009<br />Media: Press general<br />Sector: Publishing <br /><br />Ad<br />A front-page flash on ConVerse - a newspaper distributed to prisons - stated "THE HIGHEST CIRCULATION NATIONAL NEWSPAPER FOR PRISONERS."<br /><br />Issue<br />A reader challenged whether the claim "THE HIGHEST CIRCULATION NATIONAL NEWSPAPER FOR PRISONERS" was misleading and could be substantiated.<br /><br />The CAP Code: 3.1;7.1;18.1;18.3<br /><br />Response<br />ConVerse said the "highest circulation" claim was based on the number of copies delivered to prisons. ConVerse said the Oxford English Dictionary defined "circulation" as "the number of copies of each issue of a newspaper, magazine, etc. distributed." They said they believed their "highest circulation" claim was therefore likely to be understood as referring to the number of copies distributed only. They supplied figures, which they described as circulation figures, published respectively in ConVerse and their competitor publication. They believed the figures showed that, over the preceding 15 months, ConVerse had circulated 52,000 copies more than the competitor publication. They said that amounted to an average of 3,500 more copies per month, which they believed justified the "highest circulation" claim. They said that, in addition to England and Wales, their competitor's publication was also circulated to prisons in Scotland and Northern Ireland, and so their competitor's circulation figures for England and Wales were in fact smaller than their total circulation figure. ConVerse said they conducted surveys with prisons every six months to check that the newspaper was being received and distributed satisfactorily and whether too many or too few were being delivered. They said that, for a prison population of 83,000 prisoners in England and Wales spread across 139 prisons, their latest monthly figures (dated February 2009) were that they had printed 48,000.<br /><br />They said the "national" part of their claim referred to England and Wales. They said the Probation Service referred to itself as the National Probation Service and its remit covered England and Wales but not Scotland or Northern Ireland.<br /><br />Assessment<br />Upheld<br />The ASA considered it was reasonable for ConVerse to use the term "national" within England and Wales to refer to distribution within England and Wales. We noted that the figures ConVerse had supplied and described as circulation figures would have been described as distribution figures if they had been subject to normal Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC) criteria. We noted that the print invoices ConVerse had supplied showed their print run figures exceeded the distribution figures that the competitor publication claimed for itself. We noted the dictionary definition of "circulation" which ConVerse had supplied, together with the exceptional circumstances of a free newspaper that was distributed to prisons only. We nevertheless considered readers, and in particular advertising buyers who were potential advertisers with ConVerse, would be familiar with ABC's use of the terms "distribution" and "circulation" and that they were therefore likely to understand ConVerse's "highest circulation" claim to mean that they had the highest sales figures. We considered that, because ConVerse had not shown that they had the highest sales figures of any national newspaper distributed to prisons, the claim was likely to mislead. We told ConVerse to remove the claim and, in future, to avoid using the word "circulation" to describe the number of copies of ConVerse distributed.<br /><br />The ad breached CAP Code clauses 3.1 (Substantiation), 7.1 (Truthfulness) and 18.1 and 18.3 (Comparisons).<br /><br />Action<br />The ad must not appear again in its current form.<br /><br />Adjudication of the ASA Council (Non-broadcast)<br /><br />Ben Gunn, General Secretary of the AoP, and John Hirst were recently attacked unjustly by the fraudster Mark Leech of Arsehole Press. Revenge is sweet and a dish best served cold...jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-91883216266512962132009-04-02T09:53:00.002+01:002009-04-02T09:59:49.316+01:00The future is in our hands<a href="http://www.insidetime.org/articleview.asp?article=12">The future is in our hands</a><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://www.insidetime.org/images/future0409.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 250px; height: 200px;" src="http://www.insidetime.org/images/future0409.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a><br /><br />By: Ben Gunn - HMP Shepton Mallet<br /><br />Lifer Ben Gunn announces that he is the newly appointed General Secretary of the Association of Prisoners and challenges all prisoners to play their part in bringing about change<br /><br />It seems that I have been ‘anointed’; a wizened hand reached down from Hull and passed on the baton that is the General Secretary of the Association of Prisoners - AoP. Perhaps it's because I tweak the management's tail through my comments in Inside Time; or maybe it's because I do love the politics!<br /><br />Whatever the reason John Hirst, founder of the Association of Prisoners and winner of several important legal challenges, has passed the pen down the line to me. Some of you know me, I have been wandering the landings for 29 years and gracing the pages of Inside Time for so long I'm surprised you aren't sick of me.<br /><br />What fewer people know is that I began this sentence when I was a youngster, standing in the dock in my school uniform having killed a friend. My tariff was 10 years but due to my bloody-minded refusal to keep my mouth shut I'm still here 29 years later. If there is one thing I just can't stomach it is abuses of power; and as the essence of prison is power, I have found myself at odds with management in most places I've been. <br /><br />That attitude now sees me at the helm of an Association which has no formal structure and no list of members. In one sense, long may it stay that way; the Prison Service currently forbids us from organising nationally, claiming that we have no shared interests. That is just a reflection of their fear, because all prisoners obviously have shared concerns – we labour under a national set of rules, a national IEP system, a national psychology programme ... to claim otherwise is just plain silly. <br /><br />One of the legal challenges I intend to make this year in the name of the AoP is against these petty restrictions and to stop the Prison Service saying we are allowed to organise but then throwing up so many barriers as to make it impossible. <br /><br />However for the moment, we have to work with what we have - no national organisation. For the time being, what I want to do is develop the AoP into a loose collective of individuals who share a similar outlook, spread across the system. These are the people who take the time to help others with the perpetual ‘paper-chase’ that rules our futures; the ones who have the sense to stand up and resist the system’s excesses; the ones who stick their head up above the parapet and say their bit on the landings and in Inside Time. <br /><br />Look around you; there is one of these people on every landing. There are those driven by outrage or despair; there are those driven by anger; and there are those driven by a deep understanding of the crass waste of life that is imprisonment. Some of these people have only their balls and brass-neck to offer. Some have a particular knowledge of psychology, law, prison, parole or the IEP system. All of these people have their effect and, little by little, change does happen. It may be a screw who thinks twice, or a management policy that is altered, but things do change. Now imagine how much more could happen if all of these professional pains in the arse got together and developed new ideas, swapped tactics to help resist the stupidities that comprise our daily life. Imagine if their particular skills were offered to help other cons who are currently being screwed over. <br /><br />I want the AoP to foster a network of active prisoners who can all subscribe to the same broad agenda and coordinate between each other. As time passes, and the conditions change, then I would like to see a more formal structure being developed, with a list of members who are able to organise and vote for the Association’s officers. Once our legal challenge is won, then each wing, each prison, will be able to organise and elect its representatives, and the AoP leaders will exist only because you chose them. <br /><br />Alongside this informal collective, John Hirst and myself will be reaching out to invite support for various aspects of the AoP’s agenda from prisoner-friendly groups and individuals in high positions and low places. As these links develop, we hope that the loose collective of members will become more focused and formal - but still with the same aims. <br /><br />As well as challenging the restrictions placed on the Association, I can now reveal that I am the un-named party who took up last month’s front page in Inside Time - I am attempting to force the government to deal with the prisoners’ vote judgment that they have avoided for four years. Along with this, I intend to challenge the fact that we are being used as forced labour for outside companies. <br /><br />But this isn't 'someone else’s struggle'. It is the struggle of every prisoner on every landing to be treated decently. Each of us can play a part, in a thousand small ways. Each time you request a copy of your OASys and demand the errors be removed; each time you write in the food comments book; each time you challenge a psychologist; each time you refuse to be spoken to like an idiot; each entitlement you demand... in itself, each of these is a small gesture, an infinitesimal ripple; however each in itself also speaks volumes; for each is a sign that as individuals we are autonomous, thinking human beings and not rabble to be dismissed and misused. <br /><br />Each small step any of us takes is an assertion that we are individuals, not 'bodies', and that what we say matters. Each tiny step builds our confidence and shows us that we can make a difference. And once we have that confidence in our own voice, then we can begin to speak louder and more firmly. The future is in our hands. Welcome to the Association of Prisoners.jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-46773913894175971122009-04-01T13:30:00.001+01:002009-04-01T13:38:18.944+01:00The law should stand up for prisoners too<a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/joepublic/2009/apr/01/prisoners-human-rights">The law should stand up for prisoners too</a><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Society/Pix/pictures/2009/3/31/1238496197512/Rioting-prisoners-at-Stra-001.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 460px; height: 276px;" src="http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Society/Pix/pictures/2009/3/31/1238496197512/Rioting-prisoners-at-Stra-001.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a><br /><br />By Eric Allison<br /><br />Throughout my association with the penal system - a link stretching back over 50 years - there has always been talk and hope that, one day, prisoners would gain "rights". And the fight for those rights has not been limited to lobbying. The riots that erupted in the last three decades of the last century, at Hull, Parkhurst, Strangeways, and other jails, had a common cause: in every case, prisoners had reached the end of their tether; their rights, as human beings, had been ignored once too often.<br /><br />Now, nearing the end of the first decade after the millennium, a new chapter in the struggle has begun. As before, prisoners are leading the way - but this time not on the wings and landings of the system. They are taking their fight to the courts, and they may just have the government on the run.<br /><br />Later this year, a legal challenge to the government's refusal to give prisoners the vote will be launched. Five years ago on Monday, the right of prisoners to be involved in the electoral process was established by the European court of human rights after a former prisoner, John Hirst, had successfully argued that a high court ruling in 2001, forbidding prisoners to vote, was a breach of his human rights. The government appealed and lost. It then spent two years on a consultation exercise, but refused to publish the results, then announced that another discourse would take place, but will not say when this will begin or end. The fudging may now have to stop.<br /><br />The challenge, by the newly-reformed Association of Prisoners (AoP), will seek a high court ruling that the ban on prisoners voting is a breach of the Human Rights Act. Lawyers for the AoP will ask the court to order the government to enact legislation allowing prisoners to vote, before the next general election. If the government refuses, an injunction will be issued to prevent the next election taking place.<br /><br />This challenge has firm foundations. Parliament's joint committee on human rights has stated that "the government must give prisoners the right to vote or the next general election will be illegal under European law. Ministers have been warned."<br /><br />The Ministry of Justice is running scared on this issue, terrified of the reaction of the tabloids to prisoners becoming engaged in the democratic process. It has suited New Labour, as it suited the Tories before them, to dehumanise prisoners in the eyes of the public. It ignores the fact that, one day, all but a minuscule minority of prisoners will re-enter the society they came from, and that common sense dictates that we engage prisoners in that society as much as possible while they are detained.<br /><br />Giving suffrage to prisoners will not be a panacea for the ails of the system that holds them. To cite just two problems, it will not stop the scandal of imprisoning, in their tens of thousands, those who, in a just society, would be treated for the mental health problems they suffer from (if you enter a local prison - the jails that receive prisoners from courts - you are more likely than not to be forced to share a cell with a prisoner who has significant mental health problems); and nor will it stop the practice of holding prisoners hundreds of miles from their homes, thereby creating massive problems for their (innocent) families and friends.<br /><br />It may, however, concentrate the minds of MPs in constituencies where there are prisons - the Isle of Wight, for example, holds around 1,500 prisoners - and force them to address the need for reform. How ironic it will be if it is the judiciary that brings about this change, over the heads of a government that panders to tabloid tastes.<br /><br />It is said that everyone deserves their day in court. Those who are held in our jails have had more such days than most, and generally see the law as being solely an instrument of punishment. If the law that sent them down now stands up for the rights of prisoners, who knows, maybe some of them will be less inclined to break it in the future.<br /><br />• Eric Allison writes on criminal justice.<br /><br />n.b. This post was copy and pasted after 12 Noon and therefore is not an April Fool's Day joke and should be taken seriously.jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-54014851127070187862009-03-22T21:18:00.000+00:002009-03-22T21:20:30.100+00:00Prisoners votes case on The Politics ShowPrisoners votes case on The Politics Show<br /><br /><a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00j9mpj/The_Politics_Show_Yorkshire_and_Lincolnshire_22_03_2009/">The Politics Show Yorkshire and Lincolnshire</a><br /><br />Fast forward to 30 minutes for discussion of prisoners votes case.jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-48336966354846804712009-03-22T00:20:00.000+00:002009-03-22T00:24:06.644+00:00AoP petition to EU ParliamentAoP petition to EU Parliament<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi5A734QyDD_L7g19lJ71X7HgnSuBj9YgPqvivuUA4mC4qLsb55pmW8jCbFENppvt25oHSup02F2rprnTh2RRpF8fR-eJjF_SbLcu79jOMd08GNil-myAiiPDZCnRwZcHlyT8Qgr8w9imI/s1600-h/SAVE0001.BMP"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 284px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi5A734QyDD_L7g19lJ71X7HgnSuBj9YgPqvivuUA4mC4qLsb55pmW8jCbFENppvt25oHSup02F2rprnTh2RRpF8fR-eJjF_SbLcu79jOMd08GNil-myAiiPDZCnRwZcHlyT8Qgr8w9imI/s400/SAVE0001.BMP" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5315800826463151698" /></a>jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-53327698158378192302009-03-21T21:54:00.000+00:002009-03-21T21:55:37.439+00:00Innocent Inmates Association of OhioInnocent Inmates Association of Ohio<br /><br /><a href="http://www.innocentinmates.org/inframe.html">Prisoners Are Now Telling You What Really Happens in Your Judicial System and the Prison Business</a>jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-24145779476854739532009-03-21T21:30:00.000+00:002009-03-21T21:32:50.101+00:00Palestinian prisoners; Israeli diplomats<a href="http://blogs.ft.com/rachmanblog/2007/08/palestinian-prihtml/">Palestinian prisoners; Israeli diplomats</a><br /><br />By Gideon Rachman<br /><br />August 2, 2007 10:35am <br /><br />Life for the Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank is getting steadily worse. On Wednesday, an Israeli official told me that the Gaza economy is in a “state of total collapse”. Travel for Palestinians on the West Bank is incredibly arduous because of the huge number of Israeli road-blocks.<br /><br />But – right now – many Palestinians seem more pre-occupied by the internal dispute between Hamas and Fatah than by the Israelis. I got a sense of the bitterness of the dispute when I visited Issa Qaraqe, a Fatah legislator, in his offices in Bethlehem.<br /><br />Qaraqe runs the <span style="font-weight:bold;">Palestinian Prisoners Association</span>, which tries to look after the interests of the 11,000 Palestinians in Israeli jails. He himself was imprisoned for 10 years and then released in 1993. On his office wall is a large poster of Bobby Sands, the first IRA hunger-striker to starve himself to death in a British prison.<br /><br />But Qaraqe’s take on Hamas is almost as dark as the version you will get from the Israeli foreign ministry. He is not uncritical of his own organisation – and will admit that Fatah has committed human-rights violations and made huge political errors. But Hamas, he says, are Islamist fanatics and the tools of Iran. He says that while Fatah have a secular, democratic and nationalist view of the Palestinian problem, Hamas “approach the Palestinian issue as a religious question, not a national question.” He claims that Gaza is in the early stages of “Talibanisation” – and points to the destruction of the statue of the unknown soldier in Gaza, likening it to the Taliban’s destruction of Buddhist statues.<br /><br />This is all contentious stuff. Hamas officials point out they won democratic elections and they are at pains to present a moderate and welcoming face to the foreigners who are trickling back into Gaza. UN people and visiting journalists say that security in Gaza is much improved, since the Hamas takeover. But Qaraqe’s hardline take on Hamas accurately reflects the views of Abu Mazen, the Palestinian president. UN people say that the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank is even more insistent on cutting off Gaza economically than the Israelis.<br /><br />All this leaves the Israelis themselves sitting pretty – at least for now. Few Israelis I’ve met seem to have any real expectations for the latest peace initiative, which they assume will run into the sand.<br /><br />Israeli officials remain obsessed by the “Iranian threat” – in particular Iran’s support for Hamas and its nuclear programme. By contrast, they seem oddly relaxed about the debacle in Iraq. If the Israelis provoked the Iraq war – as many conspiracy theorists allege – they seem curiously detached about its disastrous outcome.<br /><br />One official analyst explained that they cannot start producing internal papers about what will happen when the Americans pull out – because they will inevitably leak and cause embarrassment. But, when they focus on the problem, the Israelis do see plenty of reason to worry. In particular, they are anxious that the likeliest outcome is that the US leaves behind a weak Shia-led government that is in Iran’s pocket – thus hugely expanding Iran’s regional clout. And they blame the Americans naïve pre-occupation with democracy for this outcome. When I asked one Israeli official what the best outcome in Iraq would be, he replied – “Find a pro-western Sunni strongman, who will reconstitute the Baath party, hold the country together and keep Iran in check.” I don’t think he was joking.<br /><br />It is very striking that the Israelis – at least at the level of diplomats and analysts - do not share the Bush administration’s belief in democracy promotion. The term “neo-con” is bandied about with as much contempt as in left-wing London salon. The Israelis see their region in cold, Kissingerian balance-of-power terms. They seem frustrated that America is not doing more to woo Syria away from Iran – something they once again blame on Bush’s tiresome crusade for democracy. As far as the Israelis are concerned, elections in their region have so far brought them an Iraqi government in Iran’s pocket and Hamas. They are not keen to press on with the experiment.<br /><br />August 2, 2007 10:35am in Middle Eastjailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-24560150494840391332009-03-21T21:04:00.000+00:002009-03-21T21:08:21.173+00:00UK: Prisoners' Association criticises White Paper<a href="http://www.hrea.org/lists/prisoner-rights/markup/msg00044.html">UK: Prisoners' Association criticises White Paper<br /></a><br />* Subject: [prisoner-rights] UK: Prisoners' Association criticises White Paper<br />* Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2002 15:07:26 +0100<br /><br />The Association of Prisoners<br /><br />PRESS RELEASE<br />Immediate Release - No Embargo<br /><br />Prisoners' Association<br /> criticises White Paper<br /><br />An organisation campaigning for the rights of prisoners has criticised the <br />White Paper, "Justice for All", published this afternoon by the Home Secretary.<br /><br />General Secretary of the Association of Prisoners, John Hirst, said today:<br /><br /> "Justice for All is not the piece of carefully<br /> considered legislation that we need. It amounts to<br /> little more than knee-jerk reaction to public concerns,<br /> many of which are unfounded."<br /><br />Mr Hirst, who is serving a life sentence at Sudbury prison in Derbyshire, <br />also criticised plans to increase magistrates' sentencing powers to twelve <br />months. "If you want a plan guaranteed to increase the prison population <br />overnight, then you've found it. It will also lead to more people opting <br />for a Crown Court trial in the hope of being found not guilty - but costing <br />the taxpayer millions."<br /><br />"What is needed is a concerted effort at reinforcing public confidence in <br />the criminal justice system, then allowing a reduction in the prison <br />population. For as long as the public see a community penalty as a 'let <br />off', a reduction in the prison population would be political suicide," he <br />added.<br /><br />ENDSjailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-66052150576656485992009-03-21T20:51:00.000+00:002009-03-21T20:55:34.504+00:00Prisoners let down by the systemPrisoners let down by the system<br /><br />Published Date: 29 August 2004<br /><br />YOUR article ‘Pants protest against Scots prisons’ (News, August 22), concerning the <span style="font-weight:bold;">Association of Scottish Prisoners</span>’ efforts to secure the basic necessities for hygiene contained some inaccuracies which, I feel, distorted the issue.<br />I have had to raise legal actions in the past just to force the Scottish Prison Service to obey the law, but I do feel that we should expect the SPS - as part of the justice system - to obey the law as a matter of course and not only when obliged to do so by the courts. <br /><br />While I accept that some prisoners may have raised issues in the courts which could be regarded as frivolous, I do not think it unreasonable that I should expect clean underwear and socks more frequently than once a month. Nor is this an isolated case - I have had to take the same issue to the press on two previous occasions in order to secure the most basic hygiene.<br /><br />I also feel that the picture painted of prisoners and lawyers jumping on the gravy train was disingenuous. I was first to raise the issue of slopping out, almost five years ago - I did this through the internal complaints procedure, with no thought of legal action.<br /><br />Despite a recommendation from the Prisons Complaints Commissioner, and the acceptance by the chief executive that slopping out was "degrading and unacceptable", nothing has been done in the intervening years. Nor is the problem beyond solution - the SPS have a contingency plan prepared should they lose the appeal in the Napier case; to place two extra officers on night shift and allow prisoners access to toilets - ending slopping out at a stroke. This could be done tomorrow.<br /><br />I did make it very clear to your journalist that I had not sought legal aid on the laundry issue, nor was it likely to be granted. I have raised actions in the courts in the past, but always for a token £50 damages - the object being to secure lawful conditions, not to milk the public purse.<br /><br />Annabel Goldie makes the telling point - the internal complaints system does not work! We are obliged to raise issues in the courts which should have been resolved internally. The Complaints Commission takes over a year to respond to complaints, thereby making the commission irrelevant to prisoners serving less than two years. If matters were dealt with promptly and effectively internally there would be no need to resort to legal action; but to suggest that we are deliberately raising matters to secure damages is grossly inaccurate - we are doing so because the system has failed us!<br /><br />And we are well aware when we attempt to do so that it is extremely unlikely that legal aid will be granted. My previous actions have been funded by myself and were born of disgust at the SPS being able - and willing - simply to ignore the law.<br /><br />Far from jumping on the gravy train, such actions, and the running of the Association of Scottish Prisoners, have occasioned considerable personal expense - so in the public/personal purse issue I am working at a loss. Give us a complaints system that works, and a prison service that obeys the law as a matter of course, and we would not have to go to the courts.<br /><br /><a href="http://news.scotsman.com/letters/Prisoners-let-down-by-the.2559501.jp">John Higgins, secretary, Association of Scottish Prisoners</a>jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-41428744070559589282009-03-21T20:36:00.000+00:002009-03-21T20:39:20.845+00:00TV Licensing abandons case against unlicensed TV ownerTV Licensing abandons case against unlicensed TV owner<br /><br /><a href="http://www.out-law.com/page-7465">A former prisoner at the forefront of prison law advocacy has overturned a TV licensing conviction on appeal. John Hirst said that he used his television only for watching videos, DVDs and CCTV footage of his own house but was found 'technically guilty'.</a><br /><br />Hirst, who tells this week's OUT-LAW Radio about the case, represented himself at Hull Magistrates' Court despite suffering from Asperger Syndrome, a form of autism. Again representing himself, he won his case on appeal to the Hull Crown Court when the TV Licensing Authority decided not to defend the case.<br /><br />Hirst claimed that the interview on which his conviction was based was improperly carried out when representatives of TV Licensing visited his home. An unusual verdict at the Magistrates' Court found him 'technically guilty' but gave him a complete discharge.<br /><br />Hirst said that he thinks that is because the court believed him that he did not view television broadcasts on his set. "That was when I knew they believed I was telling the truth," he said.<br /><br />Despite the fact that Hirst was discharged, he took the appeal on a point of principle. "The TV Licencing Authority assume if you say that you don't watch your TV for live broadcasts you're a liar," Hirst told OUT-LAW Radio. "It's still down to the prosecution to prove guilt, not for the assumption to be there that you are guilty and you need to prove innocence."<br /><br />"As far as I am concerned there is nothing such as 'technically guilty' in English law, you are either innocent or you are guilty," he said.<br /><br />Hirst is an expert in prison reform. Convicted for manslaughter in 1979 he was a violent prisoner who was moved from prison to prison. In the late 1980s he applied for an experimental educational programme and learned that prisoners had the right to air their grievances through official channels that he said prisoners were never told about.<br /><br />Diverting his energy to legitimate protest he successfully used the Human Rights Act to challenge the governments' attempts to ban prisoners from speaking to the media and in 2000 formed the first prisoners' representative group, the <span style="font-weight:bold;">Association of Prisoners</span>.<br /><br />Hirst believes that if more prisoners knew about their legal rights they would not have to conduct riots to voice their objections to their treatment. "I realised that I could now start complaining and receiving responses to complaints rather than start throwing the desk around and being violent," he said.<br /><br />It was a sense of injustice that led him to take his TV licence case as far as he did. "It began with a whole lot of letters that came, each letter got more and more threatening as it went along," he said. "It was a whole lot of assumptions that I was doing something wrong."<br /><br />"I have admitted to offences as sever as manslaughter and arson, so I'm not going to lie on something as piddling as a TV Licence," he said. "They got that wrong, they picked on the wrong person."<br /><br />When contacted, the TV Licensing Authority did not say why they did not defend the Crown Court appeal.<br /><br />See: <a href="http://www.out-law.com/page-7212">OUT-LAW Radio</a>jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-73004371543231269622009-03-21T18:51:00.000+00:002009-03-21T18:56:20.181+00:00AoP early daysAoP early days<br /><br /><a href="http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/?lid=340">Rye Hill (Warwickshire)<br /><br />Group 4 Falck and Carillion manage this prison (capacity 600). <br /><br />In April 2001, according to the <span style="font-weight:bold;">Association of Prisoners</span>, a teacher in the prison was not allowed to take her copy of the Guardian with her into the education unit. Mr Hirst, General Secretary of the Association of Prisoners speculated that this might have been because the Guardian reported about three prisoners’ High Court case for prisoners being given the right to vote.60<br /><br />60 Group 4 bans the Guardian on Prison Education Unit, Press release from the Association of Prisoners, 10 April 2001.</a>jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-44734189764942978462009-03-21T18:38:00.000+00:002009-03-21T18:40:06.897+00:00Prison Conditions at HMP Woodhill - Babar Ahmad<a href="http://www.cageprisoners.com/articles.php?id=3704">Prison Conditions at HMP Woodhill - Babar Ahmad</a><br /><br />26/10/2004<br /><br /><br />Dear brothers, sisters, friends, supporters and well-wishers,<br /><br />Assalamu alaikum<br /><br />I have received a number of letters asking me to describe some of the prison life here at Woodhill. I will attempt to highlight some details about life here, bearing in mind that the conditions and regime vary from prison to prison. Since all the Muslim political prisoners here are in the dangerous ‘A Category’, they are housed separately, together with other dangerous prisoners, i.e. those on remand for and serving sentences for murder, armed robbery, drugs, assault and other violent offences. Being a dangerous prisoner has its privileges, in that you always have your own cell (because you might murder your cell mate if you have one!) Therefore, the conditions described forthwith apply to this dangerous category of prisoners, since you will be placed into this category when you come to prison for being a Muslim. Some details are embarrassing, but must be mentioned.<br /><br />The cell is basically a large toilet. It has a toilet, sink, bed, table, chair, cabinet and small wardrobe. Its dimensions are approximately six metres long by two-and-a-half-metres wide. There is a small window (barred of course) that you can open and close for fresh air and sunlight as you wish. You are allowed to have your own TV (you rent it from the prison for £1 a week) and can also you have your own stereo/CD/radio player sent in by your family.<br /><br />Association is when your cell-door is opened and you might do any of the following during association time: meet other prisoners either on the landing or each other’s cells, telephone (approved numbers only), get your meal (at meal time), go for a visit (if pre-arranged) with your family, shower etc. Association is about five hours per day on the other three days of the week and seven hours per day on the other three days. [Belmarsh is about two hours association per day for Muslim political prisoners.] The rest of the time, you are locked in your cell, known as “Bang Up.” Sometimes, the Muslim prisoners pray together in one of the cells if association coincides with a prayer time.<br /><br />There is no concept of awrah (shame, etc) in prison and you are regularly strip-searched. Showers are communal so you have to wear shorts and ideally go when they are empty. When you first arrive at the prison, or leave it, or arrive from court etc. you are strip searched. Likewise, you are also strip-searched before and after a visit from a relative, lawyer, etc. Every month, your cell is searched and you are strip-searched. Strip-searching is only carried out by male officers (two on average), in a private room. They never touch you and you are never naked of all your clothes at any one time. Obviously, your awrah is exposed at some point during the strip search. The above only applies to ‘A-Category’ prisoners; others are strip-searched maybe once in several months. Needless to say, as a Muslim imprisoned for your religion, Allah rewards you every time they humiliate you by this strip search.<br /><br />Most of the other prisoners are OK, there being like an informal ‘brotherhood’ between prisoners. Some of them actually sympathise with the Muslim political prisoners and curse the establishment when they see the injustice under which Muslim political prisoners are held. There is always a minority of racist inmates but since the Muslims always stick together, they are too afraid to openly display their racism, resorting instead to quiet mumbling among themselves. If anything, one fears evil more from the racist prison officers rather than fellow inmates.<br /><br />Many of the prison officers are racist and Islamophobic. They have cold hatred in their eyes towards the Muslims. However, since they are in a system that regulates them, they cannot be and are not overtly racist. Therefore, they resort to showing their hatred by making little, routine things difficult for the Muslims. In some cases, they do this to try and provoke a situation in which the prisoner reacts and then they have an excuse to assault him and then send him to the isolated punishment block. This happened to a Muslim prisoner on our wing a few weeks ago and he was beaten up by prison officers who burst into his cell. Obviously, nothing happened (in terms of disciplinary action) to the officers concerned. Otherwise, they will do things like playing around with visit booking, gym usage, trying to delay medical appointments and trying to introduce rules insisting on strip-searching some Muslim prisoners before and after Friday prayers. Although this has not been implemented yet, the prison officers will take any opportunity they can to strip-search Muslim prisoners, as they know that it is offensive to Muslims.<br /><br />That said, about one in ten officers are friendly, helpful, professional and consequently very popular and well-liked by inmates. Prisoners who have been in prison before say that every time they leave prison, they are worse than when they came in (reference to normal non-Muslim prisoners). This is not because of the facilities but because of the attitudes of the prison officers. One really sees in prison how much of a farce government directives on equal opportunities, racism etc, really are. It is ironic, therefore, when ministers ask themselves why the rate of suicides amongst prisoners in British prisons is high and increasing. No one thinks about looking at the attitudes and the manners of the prison-officers. It can also safely be said that Muslim political prisoners do not leave prison with an increased ‘understanding’ and ‘tolerance’ of their fellow British compatriots, especially when they see them in the figures of racist, skinhead prison officers.<br /><br />Halal food is available and there is always a variety. Extra food can be ordered via the weekly Argos-style canteen order sheet. All A-Category prisoners have all outgoing telephone calls listened to and recorded; all incoming and outgoing mail is photocopied and searched and all visits recorded (videoed as well when in closed visits where a screen separates the prisoner from his visitors). Legal visits are not meant to be recorded, but everyone knows that they are, secretly.<br /><br />Friday Prayers is in a hall in the prison; about 100 Muslim prisoners attend. Most are young, of Asian origin and predominantly in for drug-dealing and related offences (firearms, assault, etc.) It is sad to see so many Muslim youths who waste their efforts in such activities. Prison is an excellent environment for renewing one’s Iman and many of these prisoners begin to pray once in prison, only to stop when they go back in their bad company upon release. Since they have lots of spare time on their hands, they are hungry for Islamic books, literature, etc. Sadly, most of the Muslim prisoners here do not even have Qurans, let alone other Islamic books and literature. Muslim organisations have really fallen short in their obligations towards these prisoners, when even £20-£30 would buy a comprehensive ‘starter pack’ for a Muslim prisoner, comprising Quran, prayer mat, hadith books, heart softening books, Sahabah story books etc., may Allah forgive these organisations.<br /><br /><br /><br />British Political Prisoner Babar Ahmad<br />MX5383<br />HMP Woodhill<br />5th September 2004jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4569233696924670525.post-34271673325046428802009-03-21T18:06:00.000+00:002009-03-21T18:08:56.818+00:00Prisoners can talk to media, says judge<a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/prisoners-can-talk-to-media-says-judge-655094.html">Prisoners can talk to media, says judge</a><br /><br />By Ian Burrell Home Affairs Correspondent<br /><br />Saturday, 23 March 2002<br /><br /> Serving prisoners won the right yesterday to take part in radio programmes and speak to newspapers about issues relating to Britain's jails and the inmates held inside them.<br /><br />Serving prisoners won the right yesterday to take part in radio programmes and speak to newspapers about issues relating to Britain's jails and the inmates held inside them.<br /><br />A judge upheld a legal challenge brought by long-serving prisoner John Hirst, who claimed that jail authorities were breaching his human rights by preventing him from talking to the media.<br /><br />Mr Justice Elias at a High Court sitting in Cardiff ruled that Home Office policy on dealing with access to the media by phone by serving prisoners was unlawful.<br /><br />The judge said that serving inmates had a right to speak directly to journalists on "matters of legitimate public interest relating to prisons and prisoners".<br /><br />The Home Office, which was granted leave to appeal against the judgment, has been ordered to pay the prisoner's costs. Hirst, 53, who was given life for manslaughter in 1980 and who is being held at Sudbury prison in Ashbourne, Derbyshire, said he was "chuffed" at the ruling.<br /><br />"I have to give the judge credit for having the courage to hold out against the authorities," he said. "I find it incredible that the state is able to gag prisoners when there is a debate going on about jail overcrowding or electronic tagging." Hirst, who was yesterday on day release at an office of the charity Barnardos, where he works four days a week, said prisoners had a unique perspective on penal issues.<br /><br />"We have got an inside-out view, whereas the lawyers can only look at prison from the outside in," he said.<br /><br />The ruling will not allow prisoners to participate in live "phone-ins" and interviews for radio will have to be pre-recorded and cleared by jail authorities to ensure they do not include inappropriate material.<br /><br />Hirst's solicitor Nogah Ofer, said subjects for discussion that were barred by the ruling included comment about the prisoner's own case, information on prison security or the identification of prison staff.<br /><br />The Prison Service tightened restrictions on phone calls after convicted killer Jeremy Bamber was able to participate in a live radio debate from jail.<br /><br />Hirst, who has established an organisation called the <span style="font-weight:bold;">Association of Prisoners</span> to campaign for better jail conditions, accepted that some victims of crime or their relatives might feel "aggrieved" to hear a prisoner talking on the radio.jailhouselawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03795278184797990706noreply@blogger.com0