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Crowded jails are leading to tragedies

THE scandal of over-crowded prisons is not only bad news for the inmates, it is – far more importantly – costing innocent lives.

We have had at least two high-profile incidents

in recent weeks where people,

facing serious charges, have been

given bail and thus given the opportunity

to commit other grave crimes

while free.

The police officer Garry Weddell,

accused of the murder of his wife, was

granted bail and then went on, it is

assumed, to kill his mother-in-law (who

was to have given evidence at his trial)

before killing himself.

And Adam ('Swellhead') Swellings was

granted bail on a charge of common

assault, and within hours was one of a

gang of thugs who kicked father-ofthree

Garry Newlove to death.

Many people are now suspicious that

judges and magistrates are under pressure

to grant bail, rather than remand

a suspect in custody, so as not to make

a bad situation in the prisons any

worse.

That, if it is true – and one is driven to

the view that it is true – is outrageous.

Judges and magistrates should not be

compelled to act against their better

judgment just because the

Government cannot run the prison

service properly.

The two cases I mention above, are

almost certainly just a fraction of the

number of cases where courts have

reluctantly granted bail to people who

have gone on to commit other offences.

If anyone should suffer as a result of

the Government's inability to maintain

an adequate prison service, it certainly

should not be innocent people.

It may be hard on the prisoners, but if

discomfort has to be endured, they

should be the ones to endure it.

It would not go amiss either, if some

Home Office and Justice Ministers,

who have shown themselves incapable

of resolving this problem, might be

dumped and replaced by others who

might make an effort to tackle it –

before yet more innocent lives are lost.

SOME very penetrating questions

need to be asked about the missing

laptop which contains the personal

details of 600,000 military recruits.

It seems inconceivable that a Naval

officer however senior – or junior –

could have been reckless enough to

leave such a sensitive item in his car

overnight, whether or not it was in the

boot of his car.

Most people with a grain of common

sense would not have been happy to

have left this document out of his sight

or custody for a single moment. And

what was it doing outside the office at

all?

If this was no more than an individual

officer disobeying orders (which is bad

enough) then he will have to face the

music.

But if the rules are so lax that laptops

containing this kind of information can

be moved around willy-nilly, then

someone needs to take a long, hard

look at the rules.

And if that was not embarrassing

enough for the Government, we discover,

at almost the same time, that

sheaves of confidential medical records

have been littering the grass verges in

Devon.

Fell off the back of a lorry, no doubt.

Perhaps if they lost a few ministers

(preferably without trace) it would be

less worrying to us all.

In fact it would cheer us up, no end.

A HUGE scandal is blowing up over

the European Union's ill-fated, not to

say useless, Galileo space programme.

It is not pleasant to have to accuse people

of telling untruths in Parliament or

elsewhere – whether it is by design or

sheer ignorance (not much better), but

it is difficult to square what Lord

Bossom of Brighton, the relevant minister,

told the House of Lords the other

day with what the EU vice-president

Jacques Barrot told a press conference

in September.

Mr Barrot admitted then that most of

the money to be diverted to Galileo

was to come out of "the EU's agricultural

budgets for 2007 and 2008".

But when Lord Bossom was asked in

the Lords how much cash had been so

diverted, he categorically denied that

any money had been taken out of the

farm budget for this purpose.

Well, somebody's telling porkies.

As is so often the case, we have to turn

to the veteran and fearless Labour MP

Gwyneth Dunwoody to bring a bit of

common sense and, if I may say so,

honour, to this whole sorry affair.

What is apparently the case is that the

extra funding needed for what has

been described as "this crackpot project"

is to come from allegedly

"unused" farm subsidies which the EU

withheld from Britain as a result of the

Government's shambolic handling or

rather non-payment of those subsidies

to British farmers.

Mrs Dunwoody has labelled the Galileo

project as "not one pig flying in orbit,

but a whole herd of pigs with gold trotters,

platinum tails and diamond eyes".

A perfectly accurate description, I

would say. If somewhat under-stated.

Two Night Breaks In

Fermanagh From 50

This week in the News Letter, Fermanagh

Lakeland Hotels Association are offering you,

the reader, the opportunity to enjoy a two night

break in Co. Fermanagh or Co. Tyrone.

For further information on events and what's on in the

Fermanagh area, contact Fermanagh Tourist Information

Centre, Enniskillen: 028 66 323110

E: info@fermanaghlakelands.com

W: www.findfermanagh.com

How The Offer Works: A token will be printed each day in

the News Letter until Saturday 26th January 2008. Simply

collect four out of the six tokens printed and attach them to

the booking form which will appear in the News Letter on

Thursday 24th January 2008. One set of tokens entitles two

people to book a double or twin room.

How To Book: To book you may call your chosen hotel now

and make a reservation quoting News Letter Reader Offer,

but you must confirm your booking by posting the official

booking form complete

with four tokens within 14

days direct to the hotel. A

deposit may also be

required. Reservations must be made by phone before

posting the booking form. All bookings must be made by 1st

March 2008.


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Tuesday 29 May 2012

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