The United Kingdom has promised to give Nigerian Prisons £1m (about N210m) to improve its prisons before 534 Nigerian prisoners in Britain can be sent home to serve the remainder of their jail sentences under a deal agreed between the two countries.
“Legislation allowing Nigeria to enter such an arrangement was passed earlier this year by the Nigerian Parliament. We are now working with them on the text of a final agreement.”
There
are currently 10,786 foreign prisoners in British jails, down just three per
cent from the 11,135 incarcerated when David Cameron came to power more than
three years ago.
In
April, Cameron said, “When people are sent to prison in the UK we should do
everything we can to make sure that if they’re foreign nationals, they are sent
back to their country to serve their sentence in a foreign prison.
“And I’m
taking action in Government to say look we have strong relationships with all
of the countries where these people come from. Many are coming from Jamaica,
many from Nigeria, many from other countries in Asia.
“We
should be using all of the influence we have to sign prisoner transfer
agreements with those countries. Even if necessary frankly helping them to
build prisons in their own country so we can send the prisoners home.”
In the
UK, it costs an estimated £119,000 (about N28m) to cater for a new prisoner and
an annual average cost of £41,000 (about N10m) for each prisoner. Thus the
deportation of prisoners rids the UK of criminals and is a cost-saving measure
in the face of financial constraints.
Polish
nationals make up the highest foreign contingent in jails in England and Wales,
with 829 currently behind bars. Irish criminals are second with 769, and
Jamaica is third with 759. Romanians, Nigerians, Pakistanis, Indians,
Lithuanians, Somalians and Vietnamese make up the rest of the top ten.
-Leadership
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