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Extremists recruiting jail inmates: U.K. prisons chief

Updated - March 24, 2016 01:51 pm IST

Published - December 28, 2015 06:34 pm IST - LONDON:

Nick Hardwick, who will retire in the New Year, says officers should not be deterred from tackling gang-related activity in jails.

A top United Kingdom prison official on Monday warned of a terror threat emerging from jails, saying extremists were attempting to recruit inmates as potential terrorists.

Nick Hardwick, who will retire as Chief Inspector of Prisons in the New Year, stressed that officers should not be deterred from tackling gang-related activity in jails.

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Small number of very dangerous men

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“There are undoubtedly a small number of very dangerous men motivated by a religion or ideology who are trying to recruit other people so they will go on to commit offences linked to that ideology or religion,” he told The Times.

“You do have Muslim gangs but the point about it is, it is a gang. That is more important than it is Muslim. There might be pressure to join up, but how real that conversion is, is the big question,” Mr. Hardwick said.

His comments come after former head of counter-terrorism at Scotland Yard Peter Clarke was appointed to succeed him as chief inspector of prisons. It has been seen as proof that the government intends to get tough on terror-related threat posed by gang in prison.

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Faith as a cover for violence

U.K. prison chiefs fear the bigger problem than radicalisation may be the influence of Muslim gangs and their attempt to use their faith as a cover for violence and intimidation, the report said.

According to an analysis of prisons data, there are 12,600 Muslim prisoners in jails in England and Wales. In some top security prisons they make up a large proportion of the overall population.

Muslims comprise almost 40 per cent of the mainstream wings at Long Lartin top security prison in Worcestershire and about half the population of the main wings in Whitemoor high security jail in Cambridgeshire.

Prisoners holding extremist views

Among them are prisoners with extremist views who have threatened violence towards non-Muslims. Others are suspected of pressurising non-Muslims to convert to Islam.

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