UK jails at 99% capacity: Inmates to be freed after 28 days were remembered, allocated for £ 4.7 billion ‘record’ expansion

In a step to reduce the pressure on the UK’s over -flowing jails, Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood has announced emergency measures, allowing prisoners released after only 28 days to release.This step is expected to free 1,400 prison locations, independent reports.Speaking on Wednesday, Mahmood warned that the jail system is at a crisis point, now 99 percent of the jails to get out of space completely and of course within five months. “If our jails flow, the courts cancel the trial, the police prevents their arrest, the crime becomes unaffected and we reach the total breakdown of law and order,” he said.The emergency plan will apply to the criminals serving the sentences of one to four years, who are called back to dissolve the terms of their license. However, some sexual and violent offenses and serious domestic misconduct, including serious further crimes, would be excluded.Announcing the initial release plan, Mahmood also revealed £ 4.7 billion in Treasury funding for “record gel expansion”. This will support three new features. Additional cells will also be added to existing prisons.However, Mahmud admitted that “we cannot make our way out of this crisis”, warning that the population is growing from about 3,000 each year, it is sufficient to fill two jails annually.Despite the release of more than 16,000 prisoners already after just 40 percent of his sentences, Mahmood said that further action was “We needed to buy the time that we need”.Amy Rees, the interim permanent secretary of the Ministry of Justice, said that it is dangerous to almost complete the jails. This causes more violence, forcing the system to use emergency plans, less time for education and work, and the system. Reece warned that the justice system could be broken. Police may not be able to arrest people, and the courts may be forced to go on bail for dangerous criminals.