Wednesday, 18 December 2024, 7:04 pm Press Release: Amanda Hill
The Ombudsman has issued a damning report on the
Prisoners of Extreme Risk Unit (PERU), described as a
“prison within a prison” by its own staff. The PERU
represents the worst kind of State misuse of power: acting
outside the laws which bind us. The Ombudsman reports there
is little accountability for what is happening behind closed
prison doors.
The Ombudsman has found that every
person in the PERU is likely to have experienced prolonged
solitary confinement and conditions amounting to cruel and
inhuman treatment, in breach of Article 16 of the United
Nations Convention Against Torture (UNCAT). The prisoners
are lacking in every key facet of life: meaningful human
contact, sunshine, fresh air and rehabilitation programmes.
Mostly, they are contained to their cells for 24 hours a
day.
Housed, most for years, in a unit built for
short-term punishment, the 13 or so prisoners spend most of
their time pacing their 10 sq m yard, with little fresh air
or sunshine and no human interaction. There was little
rationale as to how prisoners were assessed as ‘extreme
risk’ and no real plan for their progression once they
were in PERU. The Ombudsman found camera footage of use of
force on prisoners by the staff and documentation of that
event been destroyed, making any external scrutiny of the
events impossible.
“The PERU represents a failure
in the treatment of fellow human beings” says barrister
Emma Priest. “Men held in the PERU are not told the basis
for their placement in the PERU and they have no ability to
challenge their status and no idea when or how they can
leave. There is no doubt that the State is breaching basic
domestic and international human rights obligations. This is
a shocking indictment on New Zealand society”.
The
Ombudsman was also critical of the lack of checks and
balances of the PERU, with even the Chief Executive showing
deference to the Prisoners of Extreme Risk Commissioner.
What happens behind closed doors stays there.Prisoners
located in the PERU included those with intellectual
disability and those on remand with no previous convictions.
It is difficult to fatham the basis for keeping these people
in prolonged solitary confinement.
“Placing
immense power in the hands of a single individual would be
frowned upon by most kiwis, who understand what democracy
looks like” says lawyer Amanda Hill. “When one person
has the power to control every facet of another person’s
life, without any intervention by a third party, we need to
be very alive to the implications of that”.
Both
Priest and Hill agree with the Ombudsman that the operating
model of the PERU cannot continue. “The response by
Corrections is insufficient. The lawfulness of the unit has
been seriously questioned in this report, and rightly so.”
says Priest. “Only a complete overhaul of the way the PERU
is run will change the illegal practices currently in
place”.
“I have no faith that Corrections is
motivated to make any meaningful change” says Hill. “It
is time for the Minister to intervene. He needs to ask
himself if he is going to be the Minister who knowingly
perpetuated torture on his watch – or will he have the
courage to make the changes needed for the State to run a
lawful
operation?”