Why are women still being sent to prison as ‘a place of safety’? | Eva Wiseman

A picture


Every now and then I learn something about the world today that sticks into me like a fish hook and I find myself asking friends, colleagues, “Wait, did you know this? Did you know this was happening?” The most recent felt like a horror-movie trope,It’s the part of the film, about a third of the way in, where a woman is locked up with the lie that the incarceration is for her own good,It’s not just films, of course, not just fiction – countless women were institutionalised in the 19th century for “abnormal” behaviours, like disagreeing with their husbands, or following “unnatural” sexual impulses,Some were locked up for postnatal depression, some alcoholism, some “moral insanity”, which meant, somehow, infidelity,But what shocked me even more than historical reports on women like Elizabeth Packard, who was incarcerated by her husband in 1860 (the doctor’s reasons included her refusal to shake his hand and the fact that she was above the age of 40), what got me asking, saying wait, was the knowledge that something similar is still happening daily, in prisons across the country.

Typically, this is how it goes: a woman on the street behaves erratically and police pick her up, concerned she might harm herself or others.Perhaps she’ll be held in a police car or cell for a while, charged with disorderly conduct, or perhaps she’ll be taken to hospital.But increasingly a lack of mental health beds means she is then taken to prison “as a place of safety” and there she’ll stay, unsentenced and without specialist care, sometimes lingering in a cell for more than a year.These patients include (wrote Charlie Taylor, HM Chief Inspector of Prisons, in a report last year) people whose psychosis can make them violent, meaning they’re held in isolation, and people so driven to harming themselves, “They have repeatedly blocked their own airways with bedding, removed teeth or maimed themselves to the point of exposing their own intestines.”In 19th-century asylums, women were offered very little mental health provision and patients routinely self-harmed.

There are a series of unnerving and moving photos online by society photographer Henry Hering who took portraits of Bethlem patients, including Eliza Josolyne, admitted in 1857 with “overwork”.She “frequently tried to injure herself by knocking her head against doors and walls, and has slept in the padded room on this account”.Perhaps it’s unhelpful to keep returning to the Victorian asylums, but here is where my mind goes, aided in part by pictures of a prison currently housing women as “a place of safety” (the words catch on the tongue) – HMP Styal in Cheshire, which occupies a former “orphanage for destitute children” opened in 1898.There were 11 suicides at HMP Styal between 2007 and 2024, more than any other women’s jail in England.One was 18-year-old Annelise Sanderson, who had been arrested in 2020 for stealing a pair of trainers and assaulting emergency workers who had intervened.

When she was apprehended she poured petrol on herself and tried to drink it; instead of being offered psychiatric treatment, she was sentenced to 12 months at Styal.A woman detained there at the same time told the BBC that it was “no place for a vulnerable young woman” and that Anderson “needed help, yet found herself in the same pit of monsters as me”.Other prisons house more tragedies.Last year a jury concluded that Eastwood Park prison in Gloucestershire failed to provide for 36-year-old Kay Melhuish’s “basic human needs” and that neglect (including a 10-day wait for clean underwear) contributed to her death by suicide.Melhuish was being held on remand during an acute mental health crisis – campaigning for access to her children, she was arrested holding a knife to her own throat.

The prison was aware of her history of suicide attempts and self-harm, and had been warned that her autism and PTSD made prison (with its noise and regular use of force) particularly difficult for her to cope with,Less than three weeks after she arrived, she was dead,Her daughter told the Guardian, “Mum was ill, not bad,”Prison is not a place of safety,For women especially, it is a place of chaos and trauma where vulnerable people struggle to maintain their dignity, let alone sanity.

A new report found that “the frustrations of day-to-day life” and a “lack of basic care” (including not being allowed to clean their underwear in washing machines) were driving women in prison to hurt themselves – the self-harm rate is 5,785 incidents per 1,000 prisoners, more than eight times higher than in men’s prisons.And into these containers of suffering are dropped women whose only crime is mental illness, who are not only locked inside bodies that are attacking them, but inside cells that inspire violence.Their presence imports further vulnerability to the prisons, to both prisoners and to staff, unequipped to deal with either complex mental health problems or the violence they might provoke.The women’s justice board’s plans to reduce the number of women in prison cannot come soon enough and should be only the beginning – prison is not a place of safety, it’s a place often, of dark and utter terror.Email Eva at e.

wiseman@observer.co.uk
politicsSee all
A picture

Kemi Badenoch says ‘western civilisation will be lost’ if Tory party fails

Kemi Badenoch has said “our country and all of western civilisation will be lost” if efforts to renew the Conservative party and drive forward rightwing ideas globally fail.Likening her own leadership to Donald Trump’s second term, she used a gathering of fellow conservatives to attack Keir Starmer for taking the knee in a nod to Black Lives Matter and described “pronouns, diversity policies and climate activism” as a “poison”.Badenoch was speaking on the first day of a global gathering in London of conservative thinkers, politicians and businesspeople. The event is organised by the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC), whose backers include Paul Marshall, one of the owners of GB News, and Legatum, a private investment company.The Conservative leader sought to position her party as the true torchbearer in Britain of a new wave of conservatism

A picture

Lib Dems say Badenoch is echoing Trump’s ‘dangerous rhetoric’ as she claims ‘some cultures better than others’ – as it happened

In a reaction to Kemi Badenoch’s speech in London at the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC) conference, the Liberal Democrats deputy leader Daisy Cooper has accused the Tory leader of “competing with Farage to fawn over Donald Trump” and choosing to “parrot Trump’s dangerous rhetoric”.During a passage of her speech, Badenoch drew warm applause in the room when she said:The Conservative party in Britain has just lost an election. We have a crisis. People ask me what difference new leadership will make? Well, take a look at president Trump. He’s shown that sometimes you need that first stint in government to spot the problems, but it’s the second time around when you really know how to fix them

A picture

More than 900 Labour figures decry party’s migration and asylum policy

A group of more than 900 Labour members and trade unionists, including MPs and peers, have accused the government of copying the “performative cruelty” of the Conservatives in its migration and asylum policy.In a joint statement, they singled out the Home Office’s decision, revealed last week, to refuse citizenship to anyone who arrives in the UK via “a dangerous journey” such as a small boat over the Channel.The statement also criticised ministers for highlighting the number of people being deported from the UK, with a Home Office publicity blitz last week using footage and images showing people being removed on planes.The statement, coordinated by the Labour Campaign for Free Movement and the left-leaning Labour group Momentum, has been signed by seven MPs – Nadia Whittome, Diane Abbott, Bell Ribeiro-Addy, Clive Lewis, Jon Trickett, Brian Leishman and Steve Witherden – as well as four ex-Labour MPs who now sit as independents, and four of the party’s peers.It read: “Last week the government has published videos of deportations, restated its intention to criminalise people arriving irregularly, and banned them from ever becoming British citizens

A picture

Badenoch and Farage to vie for attention of Trump allies at London summit

Influential rightwingers from around the world are to gather in London from Monday at a major conference to network and build connections with senior US Republicans linked to the Trump administration.The UK opposition leader, the Conservatives’ Kemi Badenoch, and Nigel Farage of the Reform UK party, her hard-right anti-immigration rival, will compete to present themselves as the torchbearer of British conservatism.Conservatives from Britain, continental Europe and Australia attending the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC) conference will seize on the opportunity to meet and hear counterparts from the US, including those with links to the new Trump administration. The House speaker, the Republican Mike Johnson, had been due to attend in person but will now give a keynote address remotely on Monday.Other Republicans due to speak include the US Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Vivek Ramaswamy – who has worked with Elon Musk on moves to radically reshape the US government – and Kevin Roberts, the president of the US Heritage Foundation, the thinktank behind the controversial “Project 2025” blueprint for Trump’s second term

A picture

Weekend voting among changes needed to overhaul UK elections system, officials say

The UK’s elections system needs a fundamental overhaul including weekend voting and a cut in the number of polling stations, the group representing electoral officials has said.Years of changes in everything from postal voting to mandatory ID, with more reforms planned, has involved “bolting 21st century voter expectations on to 19th century infrastructure”, the Association of Electoral Administrators (AEA) said.In a report on how to modernise the system, called New Blueprint for a Modern Electoral Landscape, the group makes dozens of recommendations on everything from postal votes to election timetables, saying the system as it currently exists is increasingly unsustainable.A particular issue is the difficulty in finding enough staff for the 38,000-plus polling stations used in a general election, which are open for 15 hours, especially given new complexities such as the need to check ID.Currently, every polling district has to have its own polling station

A picture

Trump’s return means UK must swiftly find a way to increase defence spending | Peter Walker

It has been one of the few political constants in a turbulent period for British politics: an agreement that defence spending really should increase. But in the second era of Donald Trump, what was a consensual background hum has suddenly become an ear-splitting alarm.European Nato members, the UK among them, have long been used to US presidents urging them to spend 2% of GDP at a bare minimum, something only a minority of them manage.Now, with Trump seemingly more intent on deciding Ukraine’s future with Russia than with European allies, and his defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, warning that “Uncle Sucker” can no longer be fully relied on to defend Europe, this is beginning to look like complacency.The UK currently spends fractionally more than 2