The Borneo Post

UK govt mulls limiting jail sentences of 6 months or less

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LONDON: The British government is considerin­g scrapping jail sentences of six months or less for most crimes in a bid to reduce reoffendin­g and ease pressure on the system, the prisons minister said on Saturday.

The move could see tens of thousands of people convicted of non-violent or non-sexual crimes, such as burglary and shopliftin­g, spared jail under the plan, Rory Stewart told The Daily Telegraph.

In an interview with the newspaper’s magazine, he said that short jail terms were “long enough to damage you and not long enough to heal you.

“You bring somebody in for three or four weeks, they lose their house, their job, their family, their reputation.

“They come (into prison), they meet a lot of interestin­g characters and then you whap them on to the streets again,” he said.

“The public are safer if we have a good community sentence... and it will relieve a lot of pressure on prisons.”

The change would mirror 2010 reforms in Scotland, where judges are now guided by a legal presumptio­n against custodial sentences of less than three months.

Reoffendin­g rates there have since fallen to their lowest levels for nearly two decades, and the Scottish government is considerin­g extending it to less than a year.

Peter Dawson, director of the Prison Reform Trust, told the Telegraph that government ministers in London “should be congratula­ted for having the political courage to start the debate”.

England and Wales’s prison population has doubled since the early 1990s to now stand at more than 80,000 inmates, official figures show.

Meanwhile more than half of the 86,275 offenders sentenced to immediate custody in 2017 were given sentences of six months or less.

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