"That might have been the one he hid under," says one, as they discuss how the 21-year-old terror suspect Daniel Khalife allegedly managed to escape the Victorian jail this month clinging to the bottom of a delivery vehicle.
What the tourists don't clock are the men who walk out of the gate carrying prison-issue sports bags, blinking into the sunlight as they taste freedom for the first time in weeks, months, years.
Most have no one waiting for them, but one - Darren, a relaxed twentysomething in a bucket hat, a plastic crucifix hung round his neck - is met by Sam, a cheery man in shorts and Crocs contracted by the local council to meet and mentor prisoners on their release.
Sam's goal is simple, yet difficult to achieve: stop Darren from going back inside. More than two in five adult prisoners in England and Wales (42%) are reconvicted of another offence within one year of release, the starkest sign that the prison system does not work.
Darren was only in Wandsworth for two weeks, recalled for a short, sharp punishment after breaking the rules of his probation after his last release. He is sanguine about life in rat-infested cells built in 1851. Vandalism is rife: last year contractors were repairing up to 300 smashed toilet seats in Wandsworth every month. Pigeons fly about on the wings, droppings splattered across the walkways.
The jail is 170% over capacity, holding 1,617 prisoners - 667 more men than it was designed for. It is also seriously understaffed. On the day Khalife allegedly escaped, 80 staff were not at work, equating to 40% of the workforce.
The gap between the standards the prison inspectorate says inmates should expect and the reality is enormous, most notably the notion that they should be allowed a minimum of 10 hours out of their cell every day.
この記事は The Guardian の September 26, 2023 版に掲載されています。
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この記事は The Guardian の September 26, 2023 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
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