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View Full Version : 'Sweden closes four prisons as number of inmates plummets'



Popular Front of Judea
12th November 2013, 13:51
Sweden has experienced such a sharp fall in the number of prison admissions in the past two years that it has decided to close down four prisons and a remand centre.

"We have seen an out-of-the-ordinary decline in the number of inmates," said Nils Öberg, the head of Sweden's prison and probation services. "Now we have the opportunity to close down a part of our infrastructure that we don't need at this point of time."

Prison numbers in Sweden, which have been falling by around 1% a year since 2004, dropped by 6% between 2011 and 2012 and are expected to do the same again both this year and next, Öberg said.

As a result, the prison service has this year closed down prisons in the towns of Åby, Håja, Båtshagen, and Kristianstad, two of which will probably be sold and two of which will be passed for temporary use to other government authorities.

Sweden closes four prisons as number of inmates plummets | Guardian (http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/11/sweden-closes-prisons-number-inmates-plummets/print)

Hrafn
12th November 2013, 16:05
Hah. As if.

RadioRaheem84
12th November 2013, 21:03
Wow. Meanwhile the US prison population rises.

Yazman
13th November 2013, 08:25
Hah. As if.

Are you going to actually contribute something or are you just going to leave this here and not elaborate at all? Why even bother making this post if you're not going to actually provide anything of substance?

If you disagree, on what basis? If you think it's inaccurate reporting, please demonstrate how.

Hrafn
13th November 2013, 13:30
Are you going to actually contribute something or are you just going to leave this here and not elaborate at all? Why even bother making this post if you're not going to actually provide anything of substance?

If you disagree, on what basis? If you think it's inaccurate reporting, please demonstrate how.

No need to be an ass about it.

The government is presenting this as something, for the state, positive. "Yay crime is down, our rehabilitation is working out, less convicts to house". I would rather attribute it the cut-down-on-everything policies of the Alliance. Not that less prisons aren't a good thing for the people, unlike the cuts in schooling, healthcare, and so on.