Ministers boot security giant G4S out of HMP Birmingham after prison descended into anarchy with staff asleep during inspection
The Ministry of Justice officially triggered the 'step in' process and the governor and senior management will be booted out after months of violence
SECURITY firm G4S was booted out of one of Britain's biggest prisons after it descended into anarchy, it's reported.
Staff at HMP Birmingham were asleep or had locked themselves in rooms when inspectors came while inmates were openly taking drugs and carrying out assaults.
Ministers dramatically stripped private contractors G4S of its 15-year, £30 million contract and sacked the governor.
In a humiliating blow for the outsourcing giants, the Ministry of Justice officially triggered the “step in” process to take control of Britain's worst jail that has been run privately since 2011.
Six inmates have died inside this year, with former guards claiming it is "controlled by prisoners" with Victorian cells dangerously overcrowded.
In 2016 more than 600 inmates rioted at the 1,400 strong facility, which is one of five private prisons run by G4S.
The rescue plan will immediately see number of prisoners slashed by 300 and the current governor and senior management staff booted out after months of failure and violence.
Six inmates have died inside this year in HMP Birmingham
Last week the Chief Inspector of Prisons put HMP Birmingham on notice, branding it poor in all criteria including safety, respect, activity and resettlement.
Prisons Minister Rory Stewart insisted the move would not leave taxpayers out of pocket, but warned “drastic” action was needed and the Prisons Service would be in charge for at least six months.
He said: “What we have seen at Birmingham is unacceptable and it has become clear that drastic action is required to bring about the improvements we require.”
The Ministry of Justice insisted that guards jobs were safe at the jail, adding: “HMPPS will work closely with G4S to ensure minimal disruption and to reassure staff of our mutual commitment to stabilising the prison and putting it on a sustainable footing.”
The report by Chief Inspector of Prisons, Peter Clarke, found that HMP Birmingham was one of the most violent prisons in England and Wales.
Inmates could act with "near impunity" and "routinely disregarded the rules" leaving terrified staff to lock themselves in rooms or sleep rather than patrol the prison, he said.
His report also notes that blatant drug use would go unpunished, while trafficking of illegal substances including Spice was so widespread inspectors felt "physically affected" by the fumes.
It also stated that 50 high risk criminals are due for release in the next three months and measures to protect the public are "very poor".
Ministers are braced for the Labour opposition to leap on the latest outsourcing blunder, with Jeremy Corbyn deeply opposed to the private sector running public services.
Mr Stewart insisted: “We have good, privately-run prisons across the country and while Birmingham faces its own particular set of challenges, I am absolutely clear that it must start to live up to the standards seen elsewhere.”
Last night G4S said: “HMP Birmingham is an inner-city remand prison which faces exceptional challenges including increasingly high levels of prisoner violence towards staff and fellow prisoners.
Managing Director of G4S Custody & Detention Services Jerry Petherick added: "The well-being and safety of prisoners and prison staff is our key priority and we welcome the six month step-in and the opportunity to work with the Ministry of Justice to urgently address the issues faced at the prison.”
Labour demanded the government urgently scrap plans to build more private prisons.
Shadow Justice boss Richard Burgon said: "This shocking situation underlines the dangerous consequences of the ever greater privatisation of our justice system.
“HMP Birmingham was the first publicly-run prison to be transferred to the private sector. This should be a nail in the coffin for the flawed idea of prison privatisation."
The Sun Says
WHAT has the Justice Ministry been doing while anarchy engulfed Birmingham jail?
It has known for a year the prison was dangerously understaffed. What were the MoJ officials onsite up to?
The stories now emerging are appalling. Constant violence. Lags living in terror, warders more so. A “secure” staff car park torched. Routine use of drugs and synthetic highs, brazenly dropped by drones flown in by crime gangs.
It’s not about whether prisons are run by the private or public sector. Too many of both are in a parlous state. Cuts have bitten too deeply — and the Government has just hoped for the best.
It cannot go on. These jails shame modern Britain.
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