News

Red Cross to chair Maghaberry prisoner forum

Maghaberry Prison
Maghaberry Prison Maghaberry Prison

The International Committee of the Red Cross has agreed to chair a prison forum involving republican inmates in a bid to ease tensions at a Co Antrim jail.

The Red Cross took on the role after being asked by justice minister David Ford and receiving the backing of republican prisoners in Maghaberry.

The involvement of the internationally recognised humanitarian organisation comes after years of conflict at the high security prison.

The establishment of the forum was recommended by an independent 'stocktake' published last year.

However, republican inmates refused to take part in the forum after a former member of the prison's Board of Visitors, Tom Millar, was appointed as chairman without consultation.

It is understood both prisoners and senior jail officials will take part in the forum which will discuss the stocktake.

Republican prisoners are currently held in the prison’s Roe Four and Roe Three landings.

The forum will be chaired by Geoff Loane, who is the ICRC Head of Office in Belfast.

"The ICRC believes such a role fits within the organisation’s humanitarian mandate and is compatible with its fundamental principles of neutrality, independence and impartiality," he said.

"After having consulting widely on this matter, the ICRC accepted the position of chair for a six-month period on the basis that all parties to the forum agree to the ICRC taking up the role."

He said the forum is "now addressing substantive issues on the basis of an agreed agenda."

In the past Mr Loane has overseen ICRC visits to the US - run detention centre in Guantanamo Bay.

He has also worked in conflict zones including the Balkans, Middle East and the Horn of Africa.

The Red Cross has been active in the north since the 1950s and undertook prison visits until 1999, a year after the Good Friday Agreement was signed.

The Geneva based organisation set up a full time office in Belfast in 2011.

Last year’s stocktake was carried out by an independent assessment team appointed by justice minister David Ford to look at a deal struck in 2010 to relax strip searches and controlled movement in the prison.

Republicans claim that authorities have failed implement the 2010 agreement.

They also say that prison chiefs have failed to act on the last year’s stocktake

In 2012 republican prisoners ended a no-wash protest weeks after prison officer David Black was shot dead by the ‘IRA’ as he travelled to work at Maghaberry prison along the M1 Motorway.

Tensions in the jail boiled over earlier this year after prisoners claimed that movement was restricted during building work.

Last week republicans held protests across the north after claims that two inmates were forcibly moved from their cells in Maghaberry.

A spokesman for the DoJ said: "The Minister of Justice has asked the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to act as independent chair to the prisoner forums for separated prisoners.

"The ICRC has agreed to this request in its neutral and impartial role."