Irish Penal Reform Trust

Irish Legal News: Hospitalisations of Mountjoy prisoners branded 'shocking'

10th January 2017

Figures released to The Irish Times by the Irish Prison Service (IPS) and published on 9th January 2017 reveal that almost half of all inmates taken to hospital following an actual or suspected assault came from Mountjoy Prison.

The data was compiled for the period between January 2014-September 2016 on the back of a Freedom of Information (FOI) request from The Irish Times.

Seventy-three prisoners were hospitalised due to actual or suspected assaults, with 34 (47 per cent) of those being from Mountjoy Prison. There were also 21 hospitalisations of Mountjoy prisoners related to self-harm, more than at any other Irish prison.

Speaking to the Irish Legal News on 10th January 2017, IPRT Acting Executive Director Fíona Ní Chinnéide is quoted as saying : “These figures come as no surprise, but are no less shocking for that. The ongoing levels of violence and intimidation in Irish prisons, particularly in Mountjoy Prison, must be addressed.

“In 2015, the Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT) stated that violence in Irish prisons ‘remains far too high’ noting poor recording of incidents of inter-prisoner violence in some of the prisons, including Mountjoy, and recommending that every instance of inter-prisoner violence resulting in an injury be reported to An Garda Síochána, so that Irish prisons do not become ‘places of impunity’.

“The Committee also stated that the duty of care owed by prison staff to people in prison includes a clear responsibility to protect them from other inmates who wish to cause them harm, and emphasised the role of staff training in dynamic security and intervention techniques in improving prisoner safety.”

Ms Ní Chinnéide added: “The high number of hospitalisations due to self-harm, again disproportionately from Mountjoy Prison, are of equal concern and raise questions about responses to prisoner mental health issues in that prison.

“Mountjoy accounted for over half of prisoner deaths through suicide since 2012, according to published reports of the Inspector of Prisons.

“Greater efforts need to be made by the Irish Prison Service to reduce incidents of self-harm, through increased provision of mental health and drug treatment services and drug free landings, alongside measures to address the supply of drugs in prison.”

  • To read the Irish Legal News article, click here.
  • To read The Irish Times article, click here.

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