Newly recruited prison officers in the UK — including many from Nigeria — are reportedly seen camping or sleeping in their cars to save on accommodation.
The Telegraph reports that
the recruitment of foreign workers was part of measures to address the shortage
of personnel to oversee the UK’s overcrowded prisons.
According to the publication, the prison service is for the
first time sponsoring skilled worker visas for overseas workers after a change
in the rules enabled them to recruit from abroad.
Prison governors said many of the recruits came from Nigeria
and included not only skilled workers but also those switching from other visa
routes.
However, the Prison Officers Association (POA) has reported
cases of overseas recruits showing up on their first day with the assumption
that they would be given accommodation along with their job.
Mark Fairhurst, the president of the POA, said one foreign
recruit was commuting the 70 miles from Huddersfield to Nottingham for work but
then decided it was cheaper to sleep in his car outside the prison.
He said at another facility, a recruit from abroad set up a
camp in a wooded area opposite the prison after realising that there was no
accommodation provided with the job.
“We have got problems with people who turn up at the gates
with cases in tow and with their families saying to the staff: ‘Where is the
accommodation?’,” Fairhurst said.
The recruitment surged after the visa rules changed in
October 2023, allowing prison officers to be on the list of skilled workers
eligible for sponsorship.
The Telegraph said sources from the ministry of justice
(MoJ) have suggested that up to 250 foreign nationals have so far been
sponsored to work in the prison service after passing through their Zoom
interviews and vetting.
The publication quoted prison governors as noting that there
are significantly more applicants which include those switching from other
visas. They claimed that in one month last year two-thirds of the 3,500
would-be recruits were from Africa.
Tom Wheatley, the president of the Prison Governors
Association (PGA), said the demand appeared to have been fuelled by word of
mouth online.
“It’s turned into an approach that has been promoted online
by the expat Nigerian community,” he said.
He said it had created difficulties in some prisons where
there were a disproportionate number of foreign prison staff and, in remote
rural areas, issues over their integration into the local community. There had
also been “issues about language and communication,” in some jails.
Fairhurst also criticised the prison service policy of
hiring officers over Zoom and urged it to return to in-person interviews.
He said that frontline prison officers were routinely being
recruited without any face-to-face interviews.
“Recruits were then given only six weeks’ training which was
not enough time to learn how to manage prisoners,” he said.
He said the process was “simply not fit for purpose” and
that it was not surprising that corrupt and under-qualified officers were being
recruited.
There are also growing concerns about cases of misconduct
among prison officials.
The report said a record 165 prison staff were sacked last
year for misconduct, an increase of 34 percent on the previous year, according
to the HM Prison and Probation Service.
This month a former HMP Wandsworth prison officer was jailed
for 15 months after she was filmed having sex with an inmate.