Assaults in Greater Manchester prisons have shot up by over a third since 2004
Assaults in prisons in Greater Manchester occur on average once every eight hours, according to research from Hazel Grove MP Andrew Stunell.
The information, revealed in parliamentary answers to the Liberal Democrats shows that:
Hyndley combined Prison and Young Offenders' Institute was the worst offender, with assaults sky rocketing from just 76 in 2004 to 602 in 2008.
Commenting, Andrew Stunell said:
"It is completely unacceptable that an inmate attacks another inmate or prison officer nearly every eight hours in our overcrowded prisons. Our prisons are packed to the rafters, and prison officers are struggling to keep control.
"After over a decade of Labour in power, we are still struggling with a revolving door prison system that quite simply cannot cope. Prisons have become colleges of crime, and the large number of assaults shows that they are also extremely violent places.
"Ministers must realise that we cannot build our way out of the current prison crisis. It is vital that they take a longer-term view, and move, for example, drug addicts and people with mental health problems into more appropriate accommodation.
"More community sentencing for lower-level offences must also be considered, as an alternative to short prison sentences, which don't reduce the re-offending rate, and do nothing except help breed more hardened criminals."
ENDS
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