Theresa Donovan at 10:26 AM ET
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
UN rights expert urges US to release prisoner from indefinite solitary confinement
UN rights expert urges US to release prisoner from indefinite solitary confinement
Theresa Donovan at 10:26 AM ET
[JURIST] UN Special Rapporteur on torture Juan Mendez [official profile] on Monday urged [press release] the US to immediately end the solitary confinement imposed in 1972 on a former Black Panther. Albert Woodfox [AI backgrounder] was serving a prison sentence for armed robbery in 1972, when he and another inmate Herman Wallace were charged and convicted
[AP report] of fatally stabbing a guard. The men were first moved to
isolation in the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, and later to
"closed-cell restriction" at state jails. Woodfox typically spends 23
hours a day in solitary confinement, in a cell that is approximately 8
feet by 12 feet. Mendez stated that the "use of solitary confinement in
the US penitentiary system goes far beyond what is acceptable under
international human rights law," and he has repeatedly requested an
invitation to visit US jails, including state prisons in California, in
order to make a personal assessment of prison conditions within the
country. Regarding solitary confinement in general, Mendez said,
"Persons held in solitary confinement should always be allowed to
challenge the reasons and the length of the regime, and should always
have access to legal counsel and medical assistance." Mendez also
reiterated his call on the US to adopt concrete measures that will
eliminate the use of prolonged or indefinite solitary confinement in any
circumstances.
The legality of solitary confinement has been an ongoing debate in
the US. Last month Mendez stated in a report to the UN General Assembly
that governments should ban solitary confinement
[JURIST report] for juveniles and prisoners with mental disabilities.
Mendez told the assembly members that governments should impose solitary
confinement only in exceptional circumstances and for short periods of
time. In June at least 400 inmates at Pelican Bay State Prison in
California initiated a hunger strike
[JURIST report] in protest of solitary confinement. Inmates of Pelican
Bay's Security Housing Unit (SHU), a long-term isolation ward where
one-third of the prison's population is held in solitary confinement,
are the instigators of the strike, and most of the strikers from other
prisons are inmates in solitary confinement. In January 2011 the
Washington Supreme Court ruled 7-2 that holding death row inmates in
solitary confinement indefinitely is not an impermissible increase [JURIST report] in the severity of punishment.
Theresa Donovan at 10:26 AM ET
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