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Suspensions led to staff shortages

Posted: 03 March 2005 | Subscribe Online


Up to five staff at Feltham young offender institution were suspended "at any one time" for alleged assaults on inmates in the period preceding Zahid Mubarek's death.

Clive Welsh, governor of Feltham between 1997 and 1999, told the public inquiry into Mubarek's death: "A top priority was to try and ensure that we have our full complement of staffÉthere were staff shortages due to some suspensionsÉusually for alleged assaults on inmates, including three staff awaiting trial."

Welsh also said the Prison Officers Association at Feltham "resented" the introduction of different diets to meet religious and cultural needs of inmates from ethnic minorities.
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Earlier, probation officer Joyce O'Mara, who met Stewart at Hindley young offender institution in Wigan on three different occasions between 1997 and 1999, said he was a "known racist". Stewart killed Mubarek at Feltham in March 2000.

In her statement O'Mara said: "Although there were no direct racist comments made in my company, it was known in the prison that he was racist."
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It was also revealed at the inquiry that Stewart wrote a letter to a friend saying he could commit "the first murder of the millennium" just months before killing Mubarek.

Meanwhile, former chair of the Prison Officers Association Andrew Darken was due to appear in court this week over allegations he threatened another member of the association outside its London offices last year.


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