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Round-up of the week

Posted: 04 March 2005 | Subscribe Online


Round up of the week

Week beginning 28 February 2005

Monday 28th February


The Scottish deputy justice minister Hugh Henry announced that councils would have £30.83 million for tackling antisocial behaviour in 2006-7 and this would rise to £33.16 million in 2007-8. At the same time it emerged that no local authorities have used powers which came into force in October to issue antisocial behaviour orders to children as young as 12-years-old.

The Department for Education and Skills biannual national truancy sweep also began in a bid to ensure as many young people as possible attend school.

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Tuesday 1 March

 
Charles Clarke

 
 

Home Secretary Charles Clarke launched guidance to “name and shame” individuals issued with antisocial behaviour orders claiming that “publicising should be the norm not the exception”. The guidance was criticised by directors of social services and charities who claimed there was “no evidence” to show that “naming and shaming” acted as a deterrent to criminal behaviour”.


Wednesday 2 March


The government announced the appointment of Professor Al Aynsley-Green as the first ever children’s commissioner for England. Aynsley-Green’s previous post was the National Clinical Director for Children within the Department for Health.

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Community Care launched the ‘Election 2005: Putting Social Care in the Picture’ campaign which aims to raise the issue of social care during the coming general election. The campaign will include a series of reports and parliamentary briefings which will probe how party policies on key election issues often miss the vital role of social care and social work. For further details, go to www.communitycare.co.uk/election.



Thursday 3 March

 
Stephen Ladyman


Health minister Stephen Ladyman announced funding of £60 million for councils to help older people live independently longer.

The government’s Equality Bill which includes plans for a new body with powers to tackle discrimination and prejudice was also published. The Commission for Equality and Human Rights will be set up from October 2007 and would bring together the work of the Commission for Racial Equality, the Disability Rights Commission and the Equal Opportunities Commission.

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Friday 4 March

The man accused of instigating the ‘Gladiator-style’ games at Feltham Young Offender Institution denied the allegations. The branch chair of the Prison Officers Association at Feltham Young Offender Institution Nigel Herring told the public inquiry into Zahid Mubarek’s death that he had never placed unsuitable prisoners into the same cell deliberately in the hope that violence would occur.

For more information, see below.


This week at the Mubarek inquiry

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Zahid Mubarek

The chair of the Feltham branch of the Prison Officers’ Association at the time of Zahid Mubarek’s murder Andrew Darken claimed that he was victimised by the Prison Service for “lawful” union activities.

He claimed that in July 2001 the Prison Service tried to move him from his position at Feltham Young Offender Institution to a position at Head Office. They told him that the attitude of the Prison Officers’ Association was preventing change at Feltham YOI and that as chair of the branch, he was partly responsible for this.

Darken said that the misconduct alleged against him solely consisted of carrying out his trade union duties and he challenged the action in the High Court. He added that the service had subsequently backed down from moving him away from a job working with prisoners and transferred him to HMP Latchmere House.

This week the inquiry also heard that Mubarek was killed by his racist cellmate Robert Stewart after they were placed together in a game created for the “perverted pleasure” of prison officers.

Duncan Keys, assistant general secretary of the Prison Officers’ Association, told the inquiry Mubarek was killed as the consequence of a game called “Gladiator” or “Coliseum,” which involved pitting “unsuitable” inmates against each other as prison officers bet on the results. Keys named Nigel Herring, chair of the Feltham POA, as the “instigator” of the practice.

However, Herring denied the allegations and said that he had never placed unsuitable prisoners into the same cell deliberately in the hope that violence would occur.

 



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