Thursday, 4 January 2018
Torture `systematic´ in youth detention centres in 1970s and 1980s, says lawyer
The way some teenage detention centre inmates were treated in the 1970s and 1980s could be officially classed as torture, a leading child abuse lawyer has said.
David Greenwood, who has acted for victims of the Rotherham abuse scandal, is calling for a public inquiry into what went on behind bars in institutions across the country up to 40 years ago.
He said the UK signed up to the UN Convention Against Torture in 1984, but young inmates were subjected to cruel, degrading punishments even after that point.
Often the crimes they committed would these days warrant a community punishment.
Seven former prison guards at a detention centre in northern England are currently being prosecuted following allegations of sexual and physical abuse.
And Mr Greenwood has worked with other claimants who were locked up at different institutions who allege they were tortured.
The solicitor said: “These young men were a forgotten segment of society and people viewed them as worthless.
“It was torture and in any prison, in any battlefield, it would not be tolerated, yet it was systematic in our detention centres in the 1970s and ’80s.”
Mr Greenwood, a director of Switalskis Solicitors, said: “These boys were locked up, they could not run away but were subjected to what I would describe as torture from prison officers.
“I submitted a complaint to the UN concerning this and the UK’s lack of adherence to the convention in this regard. I am still waiting to hear from the UN officials in charge of monitoring.”
Mr Greenwood said ex-detainees have told him they were routinely punched by staff.
He said: “The use of stress positions was universally applied, having to bunny hop in a fully crouched position from one place to another without using arms to steady yourself was usual.”
Home secretary Willie Whitelaw’s Short Sharp Shock initiative, where inmates were given a burst of Army-type discipline was taken too far by some officers, Mr Greenwood said.
Leading criminologist Professor David Wilson was governor of a more progressive young offenders’ institution in the 1980s.
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