Hundreds of Nigerian prisoners to
be sent home to serve out sentence under deal to ease pressure on UK jails.
According to UK Daily Mail: The deal I said to be struck by the minister within weeks
According to UK Daily Mail: The deal I said to be struck by the minister within weeks
Talks are continuing into
reaching a compulsory prisoner transfer agreement, which could see more than
half of the 500 criminals from Nigeria currently in UK jails repatriated.
Prisons minister Jeremy Wright
told MailOnline how 'more foreign prisoners must serve their sentences in their
own countries'.
Ministers have been ordered to step up efforts to end the scandal of more than
one in eight prisoners being from overseas.
David Cameron vowed to end the
practice of the British taxpayer picking up the bill for criminals with no
business in the UK.
The Prime Minister said in 2010
that he would ’personally intervene’ to send more foreign criminals home.
Britain has even made clear it would pay to build new prisons in countries like Nigeria to speed up the process of sending foreign criminals home. Up to £1million has been promised to upgrade Nigerian jails, including a new wing at Kirikiri Prison in Lagos.
But to date little progress has
been made. When the coalition was formed there were 11,135 foreign prisoners in
UK jails, and this figure has fallen by just three per cent since to 10,786.
Each felon costs an average of around £40,000 a year to keep inside.
Last week it was announced that
notorious Liberian warlord Charles Taylor is to serve his 50-year sentence for
war crimes in the UK.
A prisoner-transfer agreement was
struck with Albania earlier this year to 'free up space in prisons here and
reduce the cost to the British taxpayer’.
It was the first major bilateral
prisoner transfer agreement with a country outside the European Union.
There were around 250 Albanians
in UK jails in June this year.
But securing an agreement with
Nigeria would be seen as a much more significant breakthrough.
Nigerians account for one in 20
of all foreign prisoners, putting the country fifth in the league table of
nations whose citizens have been jailed in the UK.
Justice Minister Mr Wright said:
‘I am clear that more foreign prisoners must serve their sentences in their own
countries.
‘That is why we are currently
working with the Nigerian Government on a compulsory prisoner transfer
agreement to increase the number of prisoners who are transferred.
‘Legislation allowing Nigeria to
enter such an arrangement was passed earlier this year by the Nigerian
Parliament. We are now working with them on the text of a final agreement.’
Overflowing jails abroad have
made it increasingly difficult to deport prisoners to their own country.
It is argued that by paying for
building new jails or making existing ones more ‘comfortable’ so they approach
British standards, will be repatriated.
In April Mr Cameron said: ‘When people are sent to prison in the UK we should do everything we can to make sure that if they’re foreign nationals, they are sent back to their country to serve their sentence in a foreign prison.
‘And I’m taking action in
Government to say look we have strong relationships with all of the countries
where these people come from.
‘Many are coming from Jamaica,
many from Nigeria, many from other countries in Asia.
‘We should be using all of the
influence we have to sign prisoner transfer agreements with those countries.
Even if necessary frankly helping them to build prisons in their own country so
we can send the prisoners home.’
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