Pubdate: Tue, 15 Jan 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Kim Bolan, Vancouver Sun MPs CALL FOR ACTION AT FEDERAL PRISONS Public Safety Critics Denounce the Escalating Violence Against Convicts and Guards B.C. Opposition MPs are calling for urgent action to help prison guards deal with escalating gang and drug violence in federal institutions. Both the Liberal and New Democratic Party public safety critics responded Monday to a Sun report about two prison lockdowns after a series of convict-on-convict attacks related to control of the drug trade inside. NDP MP Penny Priddy has set up a meeting with the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers to discuss the threat to their members trying to intervene in violent confrontations. Both Mountain prison in Agassiz and Matsqui Institution in Abbotsford have been locked down after stabbings and assaults last week. "Violence is too common in Canada's prisons and Canada's correctional workers are too often the victims," Priddy said. "We have officers in danger, two federal B.C. prisons are on lockdown and many more are facing the same increase in drug and gang-related crime inside prison. When will [Public Safety Minister] Stockwell Day take his employees' very real concerns and act on them?" Liberal critic Ujjal Dosanjh said the crisis in prisons will only get worse with tough new "law and order" initiatives by the Conservative government to put more criminals behind bars. "The government is totally inept at managing these kinds of issues," Dosanjh said in an interview from India, where he is on holidays. "If they can't even manage those in the prison already, how can they manage more overcrowded prisons? Things are bound to get worse before they get better." Both MPs said they were shocked to learn that federal correctional officers in B.C. are still waiting for stab-resistant vests that were promised more than a year ago. Day's spokeswoman Melissa LeClerc said Monday she was under the impression the vests had already been received. She said several of the issues raised in The Sun story are already under review after a report last month on how to deal with problems in federal correctional institutions. "It is obviously a priority for us," LeClerc said. But she said she did not know how long it would take to respond to the report, which has 109 recommendations. The union's regional president Gord Robertson told The Sun that the attacks last week -- six at Matsqui and one at Mountain -- were related to gang-related control of the drug trade inside the prisons. "We are seeing a lot more young inmates coming in with those kind of gang affiliations. There has always been the drug problem in prisons, but now it seems there is a real battle between the younger punk-type inmates and the older ones who have been in for a while," Robertson said. A recent B.C. Court of Appeal case launched by Hells Angel member Ronaldo Lising gave a glimpse into the gang world inside. Lising, convicted on drug charges, protested his transfer from medium-security Mission Institution to maximum security Kent prison because of "allegations that the appellant was involved in the muscling and intimidation of other inmates." Lising ended up being transferred to Matsqui -- another medium-security facility before an appeal of the decision could be heard. He still wanted the case to go before the B.C. Court of Appeal, but the justices dismissed his application Monday. In another case, notorious gangster Parminder Singh (Peter) Adiwal, who pleaded guilty to a violent drug-related kidnapping, is set to go to trial next fall after being charged with trafficking inside the provincial jail where he was serving an unrelated sentence. The federal report made several recommendations about eliminating drugs from jails, including enhancing perimeter control, more drug detection dogs and better searches of vehicles and individuals entering the penitentiary. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake