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		Coronavirus is a ticking time bomb for the Australian prison system 
		- 
		
		Thalia Anthony  
		The Australian Guardian  -  
		Fri 27 
		Mar 2020 
		Limited 
		prisoner release is the only way to save lives and should be put in 
		place before it’s too late 
		
		
		Comments 
		
		
		38
		   
		
		
		 
		‘In Australia, 
		prisons are already operating at more than 100% capacity and coronavirus 
		rates are increasing exponentially.’   
		
		Prisons 
		are notorious incubators for infections and the World Health 
		Organization
		
		foresees the 
		possibility that every prisoner will be contaminated with Covid-19 “very 
		quickly”. The highly contagious virus has the potential to wreak havoc 
		in the small, contained spaces of prisons, where sanitation is sparse 
		and overcrowding prolific. 
		
		In Australia, prisons are already operating at more than 100% capacity 
		and the virus rates are increasing exponentially, so prisoners face a 
		ticking time bomb for widespread outbreaks. The health profile of 
		prisoners also makes them susceptible to some of the most serious and 
		critical effects of the virus. 
		 
		
		
		Some NSW prisoners could be 
		released early under Covid-19 emergency powers 
		 
		The cracks in 
		the prison system have begun to emerge.
		This week Long Bay prison in 
		Sydney went into lockdown when two prison staff tested positive for 
		coronavirus and symptoms manifested among its inmates. There are 
		unconfirmed reports of infections in prisons in a number of other 
		Australian jurisdictions. 
		From inside 
		our prison walls, stories are emerging of frightened inmates, already 
		suffering ill health and worried that the virus means they are serving a 
		death sentence. These types of fears caused riots and prison escapes in
		
		23 Italian prisons 
		and 12 prisoners died. At least
		
		23 inmates were killed 
		in a prison riot in Colombia. 
		In light of 
		this emergency situation, urgent measures have been introduced by most 
		Australian states and territories, although without any leadership from 
		the national cabinet charged with coordinating the Covid-19 response. 
		Management plans have been devised across states and territories to 
		promote hygiene and restrict visitors and legal representatives. 
		Until this 
		week the international response has been a much swifter
		recognition that prisons cannot 
		be made safe from infection because they defy the major policy to combat 
		the spread of Covid-19: social (read physical) isolation.
		The only solution to control the 
		spread of Covid-19 in prisons is to reduce the burden by releasing 
		prisoners. In the US, the UK, Ireland and, in most significant 
		numbers, Iran, prisoners are being released to protect inmates, prison 
		staff and the community from the infection. 
		On Tuesday
		
		New South Wales 
		became the first government in Australia to introduce legislation 
		enabling certain inmates to be released to control the spread of 
		Covid-19 in prisons and beyond. The idea is to take the load off the 
		14,000-plus population in overcrowded NSW prisons. The 
		legislation grants the corrections commissioner powers to release 
		prisoners who are within a prescribed class of inmates,
		which may be determined 
		according to the prisoner’s health, age, vulnerability, health and time 
		to serve. 
		 
		
		
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		Eligibility for release includes 
		all offenders who are a low risk and explicitly excludes serious 
		offenders, with specific reference to murderers, terrorists and serious 
		sex offenders. 
		
		Prisons 
		include substantial populations of low-level and not-yet-sentenced 
		offenders who are imprisoned for short periods. People charged with 
		traffic, public order, drug possession, breach of justice order and 
		property offenders are among these populations. Release will amount to 
		early parole with conditions imposed (including, potentially, home 
		detention and electronic monitoring). 
		
		Decisions to release prisoners 
		will be determined on a case-by-case basis where the commissioner is 
		satisfied that the release is “reasonably necessary because of the risk 
		to public health or to the good order and security of correctional 
		premises arising from the COVID-19 pandemic”.
		To be eligible for this early 
		release inmates must not pose a risk to the community or to the safety 
		of victims – especially in relation to domestic violence offenders – and 
		they must have access to accommodation. 
		The granting 
		of wide powers to governments and administrators is the hallmark of 
		emergency justice laws, and this legislation is no exception. It opens 
		up a range of questions in relation to the use of discretion. Will it be 
		used in favour of non-Aboriginal inmates due to implicit bias that they 
		have a lower risk than Aboriginal inmates?
		Or will the commissioner take 
		note of the greater incidence of chronic health conditions facing 
		Aboriginal inmates that warrant their release?
		Without transparency in the 
		decision-making process, and a lack of review mechanisms, we are not 
		likely to see the trend in decision-making until it is too late to alter 
		the trajectory. 
		 
		
		
		Australia's overcrowded prisons could struggle to control coronavirus, 
		expert says  
		
		After the NSW bill was introduced, the Northern Territory corrections 
		commissioner announced that he intended to release early up to 60 
		low-risk prisoners. The commissioner has identified eligible prisoners 
		who are likely to suffer severe and critical outcomes from a Covid-19 
		infection. This will also free up its 1,700 prisoner population – more 
		than 80% of whom are Aboriginal. Release will be determined by risk 
		assessments – a process that has been criticised for its
		
		cultural bias. 
		Of concern is that remote Aboriginal communities are now “closed” in the 
		NT, meaning that no one can return until they self-isolate. This is 
		likely to be a challenge for released prisoners who do not have 
		accommodation outside of their community and may lead to unwell 
		Aboriginal people from remote communities being unduly left out of this 
		measure. 
		The NSW 
		emergency prisoner release legislation and the administrative initiative 
		in the NT is a first step in protecting prisoners. It constitutes a 
		significant concession of the dire problems of prison overcrowding, 
		especially for the many inmates who have chronic health problems.
		It should be a clarion call for 
		the remainder of the country of the need for radical action to protect 
		prisoners’ lives. Immediate implementation is necessary before it is too 
		late. Without such release measures, Covid-19 will spread like wildfire 
		in cramped Australian prisons. 
		
		• 
		Thalia Anthony is a professor at the faculty of law at the University of 
		Technology, Sydney 
		
		• 
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