A record number of inmates have died at three Doncaster prisons

A record number of inmates died at Moorland, Doncaster Marshgate and Hatfield prisons in the last year, figures reveal.
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Penal reform charity The Howard League has called for deaths in custody to be included in an inquiry into the coronavirus pandemic, as a record number of people died in prisons across England and Wales.

Figures from the Ministry of Justice show eight people died in HMP Moorland in the year to September.

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This was up from none the previous year, and the highest figure since comparable records began in 2000.

The figures do not indicate which of the deaths were due to coronavirusThe figures do not indicate which of the deaths were due to coronavirus
The figures do not indicate which of the deaths were due to coronavirus

Since then, the prison has recorded 34 deaths.

One person died in HMP Hatfield in the year to September – up from none the previous year.

Since comparable records began in 2000, the prison has recorded four deaths.

Twelve people died in HMP Doncaster in the year to September.

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This was up from six the previous year, and the highest figure since comparable records began in 2000.

Since then, the prison has recorded 82 deaths.

Across England and Wales, 396 deaths in custody were recorded in 2020-21 – also a record high, and double the number there were in 2012-13.

Of the deaths last year, the majority (281) were from natural causes.

The figures do not indicate which of the deaths were due to coronavirus, but the MoJ said there have been 159 Covid-related prisoner deaths nationally during the pandemic so far – and most have occurred since September 2020.

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The Howard League said older prisoners are most at risk from Covid-19, and that reversing the ageing prison population would save lives.

Frances Crook, chief executive of the charity, said: "Prisons have largely been forgotten during the pandemic, but the rising number of people who have died reveals the devastation that Covid-19 has brought to those living and working behind bars and their families.

"Tens of thousands of people have been held in overcrowded conditions or solitary confinement for months on end.

"It is almost impossible to fathom the mental distress that this will have caused.”

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She called for the deaths of people in the criminal justice system to be included in the inquiry into the Government's handling of the pandemic.

Separate MoJ figures show that at the end of September, 6.2 per cent of prisoners across England and Wales were aged 60 and over – the largest share on record. Six years ago – when the statistics began – that figure was 4.6 per cent.

In Moorland Prison, 100 of the 928 inmates were aged 60 or older.

At 10.8 per cent, this is up from 9.4 per cent the year before.

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In Doncaster Prison, 71 of the 1,134 inmates were aged 60 or older.

But at 6.3 per cent, this is down from 6.7 per cent the year before.

In Doncaster Prison, 71 of the 1,134 inmates were aged 60 or older, that’s 6.3 per cent, down from 6.7 per cent the year before.

Caroline Abrahams, charity director at Age UK, said: "Our population is ageing and so inevitably this is being reflected in the numbers of older people living, and dying, in prison.

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"It is important that prison staff are trained to understand the needs of older people and have access to resources and support so they can meet them."

In these confusing and worrying times, local journalism is more vital than ever. Thanks to everyone who helps us ask the questions that matter by taking out a subscription or buying a paper. We stand together. Liam Hoden, editor.

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