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Macron lays out court revamp to tackle prison overcrowding

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French President Emmanuel Macron unveiled Tuesday a series of court overhauls aimed at finding alternatives to jail, a bid to tackle chronic overcrowding at the country's prisons.

His proposals came on the heels of nearly two weeks of protests in January by prison guards angry over security risks and poor pay, the first major industrial dispute he faced since his election last year.

Conditions in French prisons have long been an embarrassment for the state, with Macron himself once describing them as "disgraceful".

"Incarceration keeps going up because at the basic level, it's a symbolic solution that most people want to see," Macron said in an address at a penitentiary training centre in Agen, southwest France.

He said France now had nearly 70,000 inmates, the equivalent of 100 prisoners for every 100,000 inhabitants, up from just 48,000 as recently as 2001.

To ease the overcrowding, Macron called for an end to any prison term of less than one month, and said those shorter than a year would no longer be applied "automatically".

Judges will also be asked to apply more alternatives such as electronic bracelets, on-the-spot fines and community service for minor offences, such as driving infractions or drug use.

And some 1,500 jobs will be created to reinforce probation and re-insertion programmes.

"This is anything but laxism," he said.

"I believe few of the people given terms of less than six months are truly dangerous for society."

But for longer sentences, Macron wants to end any shortening of the time that must be served: "A punishment has to be credible and understood," he said.

The 188 prisons across France currently have an average capacity rate of 120 percent, with some in the Paris region reaching as high as 200 percent.

An official report on conditions at the Fresnes prison near Paris, one of the country's largest, in 2016 found it to be infested with rats, with prisoners sleeping three to a 10-square-metre (100-square-foot) cell, and said surveillance was "illusory".

The January protests by guards erupted after a convicted Al-Qaeda extremist attacked guards in a high-security facility in the north of the country with a razor blade and scissors, injuring three of them.

The protests ended after the government announced a package worth 30 million euros ($37 million) in extra pay for guards as well as the creation of 1,100 new prison jobs.

French President Emmanuel Macron unveiled Tuesday a series of court overhauls aimed at finding alternatives to jail, a bid to tackle chronic overcrowding at the country’s prisons.

His proposals came on the heels of nearly two weeks of protests in January by prison guards angry over security risks and poor pay, the first major industrial dispute he faced since his election last year.

Conditions in French prisons have long been an embarrassment for the state, with Macron himself once describing them as “disgraceful”.

“Incarceration keeps going up because at the basic level, it’s a symbolic solution that most people want to see,” Macron said in an address at a penitentiary training centre in Agen, southwest France.

He said France now had nearly 70,000 inmates, the equivalent of 100 prisoners for every 100,000 inhabitants, up from just 48,000 as recently as 2001.

To ease the overcrowding, Macron called for an end to any prison term of less than one month, and said those shorter than a year would no longer be applied “automatically”.

Judges will also be asked to apply more alternatives such as electronic bracelets, on-the-spot fines and community service for minor offences, such as driving infractions or drug use.

And some 1,500 jobs will be created to reinforce probation and re-insertion programmes.

“This is anything but laxism,” he said.

“I believe few of the people given terms of less than six months are truly dangerous for society.”

But for longer sentences, Macron wants to end any shortening of the time that must be served: “A punishment has to be credible and understood,” he said.

The 188 prisons across France currently have an average capacity rate of 120 percent, with some in the Paris region reaching as high as 200 percent.

An official report on conditions at the Fresnes prison near Paris, one of the country’s largest, in 2016 found it to be infested with rats, with prisoners sleeping three to a 10-square-metre (100-square-foot) cell, and said surveillance was “illusory”.

The January protests by guards erupted after a convicted Al-Qaeda extremist attacked guards in a high-security facility in the north of the country with a razor blade and scissors, injuring three of them.

The protests ended after the government announced a package worth 30 million euros ($37 million) in extra pay for guards as well as the creation of 1,100 new prison jobs.

AFP
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