Prison officers under ‘constant threat’ of beheadings from extremists

From the BBC’s Look East (East of England, that is, East Anglia and Essex, the lands of the Eastern Angles and the East Saxons)  

Prison staff guarding extremist offenders are under “constant threat” from inmates who intend to “behead a guard and stream it online”, the Prison Officers’ Association (POA) said.

Last week two men were convicted of trying to murder an officer at HMP Whitemoor in Cambridgeshire.

POA chairman Mark Fairhurst said the threat posed had never been greater.

The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) said measures had been stepped up to “stop the spread of poisonous ideologies”.

Mr Fairhurst said their “abhorrent attack” highlighted the “bravery of staff working across the high-security estate”.

He said: “We are seeing increasingly that the people incarcerated for extremist crimes are more violent and more radicalised. We must have a fundamental review to find out how effective our de-radicalisation programmes are.

“We had intelligence passed on to us that the threat of radicalisation and attacks on prison staff was real and was imminent, and the intention of Jihadi extremist offenders – as highlighted by the Whitemoor attack – is to take a prison officer hostage, behead them and somehow screen that online via the use of a mobile phone. If you look at the tactics of extremist offenders, that is always a constant threat; a constant concern.”

Ministers are under pressure to improve counter-terrorism in the prison and probation services after a string of apparent failures to manage extremist offenders.

The BBC understands a separation centre has recently opened at HMP Woodhill in Milton Keynes, from where the London Bridge attacker Usman Khan was released on licence in 2018. The unit, believed to be among two in the UK currently in use, will hold influential, radical inmates away from the prison population.

A former inmate, who was released from Woodhill in 2018, told the BBC he was on a wing dominated by radical Islamist gangs who preyed on young inmates and tried to convert them. 

“There were a lot of people convicted of terror offences who would get together and sit at tables and talk about the Islamic State,” said the man, who asked not to be identified. He said if inmates refused to listen to their ideas, then an attack would occur.

“It’s like zero to 100 in a split second. In my case a group came to my cell, but I fought back and it was quick,” he said.”But I got off lightly, I have seen people being attacked with a blade for saying no to them.”

A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: “We have trained more than 29,000 officers to better spot the signs of extremism and have increased the number of specialist counter-terrorism staff. We will separate the most subversive prisoners from the general population where necessary.”

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2 Responses

  1. “Deradicalisation programs”? Hmmmmm…

    Do the prison officers carry guns? Or is that deemed to be “too American”?

  2. No, Prison officers are not armed. It is over 25 years since I had a Civil Service job which took me into prisons from time to time. I don’t recall then that they even carried truncheons, which was the usual police defensive equipment of the period. That might well have changed in the ensuing years.
    Police firearms units are much more common around than they were 20 years ago and when necessary they are called in.
    I fear a change in policy may be called for.

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