EMBARGOED UNTIL 00.30 HOURS, TUESDAY 19 OCTOBER 2004 The Hurt Inside The imprisonment of women and girls in Northern Ireland PROFESSOR PHIL SCRATON and DR LINDA MOORE October 2004 ISBN 1 903681 49 9 © Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission Temple Court, 39 North Street Belfast BT1 1NA tel: 028 9024 3987 fax: 028 9024 7844 email:
[email protected] website: www.nihrc.org EMBARGOED UNTIL 00.30 HOURS, TUESDAY 19 OCTOBER 2004 2 EMBARGOED UNTIL 00.30 HOURS, TUESDAY 19 OCTOBER 2004 FOREWORD People held in detention, whether in prison or otherwise, are particularly vulnerable to breaches of their human rights. The ‘closed’ nature of prison regimes makes it very important that they are open to inspection and investigation by a range of bodies concerned with the care and human rights of those inside. This is all the more crucial because many people who are in prison, especially women prisoners, were vulnerable prior to their detention, through factors such as mental health problems, educational difficulties, drug and alcohol related issues and sexual abuse. Because of the special vulnerability of people in detention, the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission decided to make the human rights of prisoners one of its strategic priorities. Several particular factors led to the Commission’s decision to carry out research into the care of women prisoners in Maghaberry Prison. In September 2002 the death of 19-year-old Annie Kelly in the Mourne House women’s unit at Maghaberry prison concerned the Commission greatly. Early in 2003 the Prisons Inspectorate published a highly critical report based on its May 2002 inspection of Mourne House.