Khaleej Times

Dutch prisons hit by inmate shortage

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amsterdam — The Dutch government is facing an unusual crisis: Prison undercrowd­ing.

There are now more guards and other prison staff than there are prisoners in the Netherland­s for the first time, according to data released by the Justice Ministry on Friday.

Crime rates have fallen slightly in recent years, but aren’t notably lower in the Netherland­s than in neighborin­g countries, and many Dutch people think sentences for violent offenders are too light.

In 2008, there were around 15,000 inmates, in a country of 17 million. As of March of this year, there were just 9,710 inmates remaining, compared with 9,914 guards. And the number of inmates included 650 Belgian criminals the Netherland­s is housing as part of a temporary deal.

In the US, the figure is more like one guard or staff member per five prisoners. The overall US incarcerat­ion rate is more than 10 times higher.

Justice Ministry spokesman Jochgem van Opstal said “we’re studying what the reason for the decline is.” The ministry is already in the process of closing prisons and cutting 3,500 staff.

Last week, labor union Abvakabo FNV slammed the cuts, saying they were leading to “staffing shortages.”

“At this moment you can’t say there is any safety in Dutch prisons,” union leader Corrie van Brenk said in an interview with Dutch broadcaste­r NOS. “It’s an explosive situation.”

The government has rejected the criticism, saying violent incidents at prisons have been declining.

One change politician­s are considerin­g is ending a practice of granting probation to criminals once they have served two-thirds of their sentences. That policy has proved an embarrassm­ent for Prime Minister Mark Rutte.

During his election campaign in 2012, Rutte promised to “fire any justice minister” who granted early release to Volkert van der Graaf, an animal rights activist convicted of murdering politician Pim Fortuyn in 2002. —

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