Yorkshire Post

Prison riot squad ‘sent into jails more than twice a day last year’

-

A SPECIALIST prison riot squad was sent into jails the equivalent of more than twice a day last year, data has revealed.

Described by some as the prison system’s SAS, the National Tactical Response Group (NTRG) was deployed into prisons in England and Wales 794 times last year – an increase of nearly 40 per cent on the 2022 total of 570.

The figures, revealed by the Labour Party in a series of written questions to the Government, are a “damning testament” to how Ministers have managed the prison estate, the Opposition said.

The NTRG is trained to intervene in dangerous, high-risk circumstan­ces such as riots. They are routinely armed with pepper spray, smoke bombs and batons, and wear flame-proof uniforms, stabproof vests and armoured gloves.

Local prison riot squads, known as Tornado Teams, were deployed 13 times last year – up from nine in 2022 and four in 2021.

These teams, separate to the NTRG, provide extra support to bring riots under control, and are normally made up of 50 officers.

Armed with batons and shields, the members undergo four months of training.

One team was deployed to restore order at HMP Swaleside in Kent in 2022 after 35 prisoners rioted, as well as in 2017 when nearly 80 prisoners, some armed with pool balls, rioted at HMP Long Lartin in Worcesters­hire.

The rise in deployment­s comes amid increases in prison violence in a near-full estate.

Prisons in England and Wales are at about 99 per cent capacity, according to the latest figures, with statistics showing there were 23,000 assaults in 2023 – up from more than 20,500 the previous year.

Shabana Mahmood MP, Labour’s Shadow Justice Secretary, said: “The shocking rise in the number of deployment­s is a damning testament to the failure to manage our prisons and the miserable impact of 14 years of Tory rule on our criminal justice system.”

Justice Minister Edward Argar said the NTRG is “a highly trained team that provide expertise in technical interventi­ons that would carry higher risk of failure or injury, and which require skills and equipment limited only to NTRG staff”.

A Ministry of Justice spokespers­on said: “We have also invested £100m in tough security measures including X-ray body scanners to clamp down on issues which fuel violence behind bars.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom