Striking French guards block jails
A strike by French prison guards entered its second week yesterdday, with at least 50 jails blocked over demands for better security and pay after a series of attacks on staff by inmates.
The protests, which have disrupted prisons across the country, began after a convicted Al-Qaeda extremist attacked guards in a high-security facility with a razor blade, injuring three of them.
Around 150 guards yesterday continued to block access to the Fleury-Merogis prison south of Paris — Europe’s biggest — with tyres and pallets.
Last week, police clashed with the guards, using tear gas and baton charges to clear a path through the barricades.
The leader of the Force Ouvriere union, Emmanuel Baudin, said that guards had sealed off access to 115 of 188 prisons nationwide yesterday.
Prisons in and around Paris, the area around Lyon, the eastern Alsace region and the island of Corsica were affected, according to the unions.
The penitentiary service put the number of jails suffering disruptions at 50.
French prisons have developed a reputation for being hotbeds of radical Islam that have turned out some of the jihadists behind a series of bloody attacks in the past three years.
Prison guards complain that the conditions in which violent and radicalized inmates are held are too lenient. Last week, three inmates at a prison on Corsica, one of whom was under surveillance for Islamic radicalization, attacked two guards with a knife, wounding one of them seriously.
In the northern Calais region, a male and a female guard were treated in hospital for injuries last Sunday after being attacked by a prisoner with an iron table leg.
Over the weekend the guards rejected proposals from Justice Minister Nicole Belloubet on improving safety and vowed to dig in.
The justice ministry has proposed creating 1,100 guard jobs over four years, improving security for guards and creating a special regime that allows for a “total lockdown” on the most dangerous detainees, measures dismissed by the guards as insufficient.
French prison guards have long complained of low pay, insufficient staffing and overcrowding. The average occupancy rate in French prisons is 118 percent, but at some prisons it has risen to around 200 percent.
Adding to the guards’ concerns is the radicalization of inmates who come under the sway of Islamic extremists. Of the roughly 70,000 prisoners held in French jails in December, 504 were convicted or awaiting trial on terrorism charges and some 1,200 others were under surveillance for radicalization.
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