logo
Mayor Andy Burnham supports Strangeways closure and move

Mayor Andy Burnham supports Strangeways closure and move

BBC News29-04-2025

Strangeways prison should be relocated from its current "out of date" city-centre location, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham has said.Manchester's political leaders and the Ministry of Justice are understood to be in initial talks about potentially closing the Victorian-era jail, said the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS)."It's out of date to have a prison where it is," said Burnham. "The clear preference to us would be to relocate the prison in the long term."His Labour colleague, Manchester Central MP Lucy Powell, said she would back the regeneration of the area around HMP Manchester, which is locally known as Strangeways.
Powell said: "Clearly one barrier to regenerating the area is the future of the prison itself."We clearly need prison spaces badly, so finding an alternative will be important."I will be working closely with the council as a constituency MP to support their work to make the case for regenerating the area and finding long-term alternatives for the prison."Currently about 99% of prison places in England and Wales are occupied, with some offenders being granted early release to free up capacity.High-security HMP Manchester accommodates 744 inmates.In December 2022, the Conservative government said it would not move Strangeways prison despite councillors saying the building was "not suitable" for the modern day.At the time, Manchester City Council leader Bev Craig warned it was "coming to the end of its natural lifespan".A 2024 report found the prison was "fundamentally not safe", with inspections discovering high levels of violence, a rat infestation, and widespread drug use.A Prison Service spokesperson told the LDRS: "Public protection will always be the number one priority and HMP Manchester is essential to locking up dangerous offenders - keeping locals safe."We will continue to work with the local councils on its future."
Strangeways prison opened in 1868 and was designed by Alfred Waterhouse, the architect who was also behind the city's Town Hall. The jail attracted notoriety in 1990 following what was then the longest riot in British penal history.Overcrowding, lack of sanitation and poor conditions led to a 25-day protest in which two people died and hundreds were injured.Approximately £90m was then spent on repairs and refurbishment, with Strangeways officially renamed as HMP Manchester in 1994.Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fact check: Reform UK migrants claim and minister's inflation mix-up
Fact check: Reform UK migrants claim and minister's inflation mix-up

South Wales Guardian

time44 minutes ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Fact check: Reform UK migrants claim and minister's inflation mix-up

Has Labour 'allowed the biggest influx of migrants in British history'? Reform UK deputy leader Richard Tice MP claimed in a newspaper column a few weeks ago that 'the statistics show without a doubt that this Labour government has allowed the biggest influx of migrants in British history'. It's not clear which figures Mr Tice was basing this claim on – we've asked him and Reform UK, and haven't had a response. But the statistics we've been able to check – both those available at the time Mr Tice made his claim, and those published since – don't appear to support it. And when we asked Oxford University's Migration Observatory about Mr Tice's claim, it told us: 'We cannot identify any data that support the assertion that the current government has been responsible for the biggest influx of migrants in British history, and we are unclear how Mr Tice came to this conclusion.' Mr Tice referred only to 'migrants' and did not specify that he was talking about any particular group of migrants, but some on social media have suggested he intended to refer solely to Channel crossings, which have been at record levels this year and hit the headlines again this weekend after almost 1,200 migrants were recorded as arriving via small boat on Saturday. Between January 1 2025 and April 27 2025 (the day Mr Tice's article was published), government statistics show 9,885 migrants were detected crossing the English Channel in small boats, and between January 1 and May 31 this figure was 14,812. Both these figures are higher than for equivalent periods in other years going back to 2018, when statistics for this measure began. But they don't support the claim Mr Tice made – firstly because they only refer to a small proportion of all migrants, and secondly because they don't cover Labour's full time in office. In the time between Labour forming a government on July 5 2024 and April 27 2025, 33,127 migrants arrived in the UK after crossing the Channel on small boats, according to government statistics. This isn't a record – the equivalent total between July 5 2022 and April 27 2023 was 38,600. In terms of overall migrant numbers, there are various different sets of data, but one of the most commonly cited is the estimate of long-term international migration published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS). The most recent such figures cover the year to December 2024, when 948,000 people are estimated to have moved to the UK. (Over the same period 517,000 people left, so total net migration that year is estimated to have been 431,000.) These figures can't tell us exactly how many have arrived under Labour, as they cover roughly six months of the last Conservative government and the first six months of Labour. The next set of figures, which will cover the year ending June 2025 and are expected to be published in the autumn, will more reliably tell us about the change under Labour. But overall the figures for 2024 were significantly down on the year before. In the year ending December 2023 around 1,326,000 people were estimated to have moved to the UK – a record high. (And 466,000 people left, so net migration that year was an estimated 860,000.) Net migration is estimated to have reached a record high of 906,000 in the year ending June 2023, when 1,320,000 people moved to the UK and 414,000 people left. So while the ONS migration estimates can't tell us specifically what the change in the number of immigrants coming to the UK has been under Labour, they appear to suggest that the 'biggest influx' of migrants on record so far took place under the previous Conservative government. The Migration Observatory believes this is the case, telling us: 'Data clearly show that the 'biggest influx of migrants in British history' took place under the previous administration.' School standards minister mixes up inflation and interest rates Speaking about the cost of living in an interview on Friday, school standards minister Catherine McKinnell MP claimed 'we've seen inflation coming down'. That's not what the latest inflation figures show, however, and the Department for Education has since told us she'd intended to refer to interest rates. While the Bank Rate – which is set by the Bank of England to influence the interest rates charged by banks – is currently one percentage point lower than it was when Labour came into government on July 5 2024, inflation (the change in prices for goods and services over time, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, or CPI) is higher than it was when Labour entered government. In the 12 months to June 2024 – the last full month of the previous Conservative government – inflation stood at 2%, while in the 12 months to July 2024 – the month Labour formed a government – it was 2.2%. As of April 2025, annual CPI inflation was 3.5%, 0.9 percentage points higher than the previous month's figure. Other commonly used measures of inflation show similar trends. This isn't the first time we've seen government ministers confuse interest rate and inflation figures. Earlier this year we fact checked the Prime Minister and Home Office minister Seema Malhotra MP after they both wrongly claimed interest rates had been at 11% under the previous government. As Ms Malhotra later made clear in an edited post, the 11% figure actually referred to the peak rate of CPI inflation in 2022.

Five areas of Newport with poor air quality see improvements
Five areas of Newport with poor air quality see improvements

South Wales Argus

timean hour ago

  • South Wales Argus

Five areas of Newport with poor air quality see improvements

A new report shows the reasons for sustained fall in nitrogen dioxide (NO2) levels along the M4 motorway are 'not entirely clear' to the local authority. But it has suggested Covid-era restrictions and changes to working and commuting patterns 'will almost certainly have contributed' to the decrease within five of the city's 11 Air Quality Management Areas (AQMAs). It said the growth in use of low- and zero-emissions vehicles is also likely to have made a positive impact. The council is now proposing to revoke those five AQMAs, found at five locations along the M4, near Bassaleg Road, Denbigh Road, Glasllwch Crescent, Malpas Road and Royal Oak Hill. Concentrations of NO2 in those areas have remained below air quality standard limits since at least 2019, according to the council report. In light of this 'continued compliance', the council is expected to launch separate consultations on the future of each AQMA later this year. If any or all of the AQMAs are removed, national guidelines recommend the local authority 'should ideally put in place a local or regional air quality strategy to ensure air quality remains a high-profile issue and conditions are prevented from deteriorating in future'.

Three Britons could face death penalty in Indonesia
Three Britons could face death penalty in Indonesia

South Wales Argus

timean hour ago

  • South Wales Argus

Three Britons could face death penalty in Indonesia

Jonathan Christopher Collyer, 28, and Lisa Ellen Stocker, 29, were arrested on February 1. Prosecutor I Made Dipa Umbara said customs officers halted them at the X-ray machine after finding suspicious items in their luggage disguised as food packages. Mr Umbara told the District Court in Denpasar that packets of Angel Delight powdered dessert mix in their luggage contained 993.56 grams of cocaine, worth an estimated six billion rupiah (£272,000). BREAKING: Three Britons could face the death penalty in Bali after appearing in court charged with smuggling nearly a kilogram of cocaine into Indonesia. 🔗 Read more — Sky News (@SkyNews) June 3, 2025 Two days later, authorities arrested Phineas Ambrose Float, 31, after a controlled delivery set up by police. This involved the other two suspects handing the drug to him in the parking area of a hotel in Denpasar. He is being tried separately. The drugs were brought from England to Indonesia with a transit in the Doha international airport in Qatar, Mr Umbara said. The group had successfully brought cocaine into the country twice before, Ponco Indriyo, the deputy director of the Bali Police Narcotics Unit, told reporters in February. The trial was adjourned until next week, when the three-judge panel will hear witness evidence, Sky News reports. Both the defendants and their lawyers declined to comment to the media after the trial. Three Brits charged in Indonesia for smuggling cocaine in Angel Delight sachetshttps:// — ITV News (@itvnews) June 3, 2025 What are Indonesia's drug laws? According to Adventure Alternative, drug use or the possession of even small amounts of drugs such as marijuana or ecstasy can lead to prison sentences longer than four years in Indonesia. Convicted traffickers or users of hard drugs such as cocaine or heroin can face the death penalty. Sky News adds that drug smugglers in Indonesia are "sometimes executed by firing squad". About 530 people, including 96 foreigners, are on death row in Indonesia, mostly for drug-related crimes, the Ministry of Immigration and Corrections' data showed. Indonesia's last executions, of an Indonesian and three foreigners, were carried out in July 2016. A British woman, Lindsay Sandiford, now 69, has been on death row in Indonesia for more than a decade. She was arrested in 2012 when 3.8 kilograms of cocaine were discovered stuffed inside the lining of her luggage at Bali's airport.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store