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                    <link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles</link>
                <title>Europe, Germany – Prison Insider</title>
        <description>All you need to know about prisons throughout the world. Read first-hand testimonials offering untold insights on prison. Access information, topic by topic, published by Prison Insider&#039;s team, news, tendencies, key figures, country profiles.</description>
        <language>en</language>
        <copyright>Prison Insider</copyright>
            <item><title>Germany: Justice Department plans more suicide prevention</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/germany-justice-department-plans-more-suicide-prevention</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            
                    <p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/germany-justice-department-plans-more-suicide-prevention">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/50afa10e/pi_revue_presse_eu.jpg">
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                    Fri, 08 Dec 2023 02:37:00 +0100                </pubDate><category>News</category><category>Europe</category><category>Mental health</category><category>Suicide</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/germany-justice-department-plans-more-suicide-prevention</guid></item><item><title>Germany: neither incarcerated nor free</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-ni-detenus-ni-libres-63e6616375048</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            <p>The German prison population has been decreasing since 2004, but not the number of people deprived of their liberty: nearly 13,000 of them are detained in forensic psychiatric hospitals. How can this be explained?</p><p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-ni-detenus-ni-libres-63e6616375048">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/2a2194e5/vf.png">
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                    Mon, 13 Mar 2023 09:00:00 +0100                </pubDate><category>Europe</category><category>Interview</category><category>Health</category><category>Mental health</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-ni-detenus-ni-libres-63e6616375048</guid></item><item><title>Germany: positive progress for German detainees, but serious concerns remain</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/germany-positive-progress-for-german-detainees-but-serious-concerns-remain</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            <p>The delegation - which visited police stations, prisons and psychiatric clinics throughout Germany- received no allegations of deliberate physical ill treatment or inter-prisoner violence, and praised material and health-care facilities.</p><p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/germany-positive-progress-for-german-detainees-but-serious-concerns-remain">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/a96ecc3a/actu_europe.png">
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                    Tue, 20 Sep 2022 01:55:00 +0200                </pubDate><category>News</category><category>Europe</category><category>Material conditions</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/germany-positive-progress-for-german-detainees-but-serious-concerns-remain</guid></item><item><title>Germany: walling up madness</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-l-enfermement-a-la-folie</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            <p>Germany is a federal republic divided into 16 Länder. The Ministry of Justice oversees prison health care. Federal law does not provide for any mental health care in prison. The Länder implement treatment measures. Significant variations have been observed from one territory and facility to another.</p><p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-l-enfermement-a-la-folie">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/184139a2/untitled.jpg">
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                    Thu, 14 Apr 2022 07:30:00 +0200                </pubDate><category>Analysis</category><category>Europe</category><category>Access to legal rights</category><category>Discipline</category><category>Mental health</category><category>Drugs</category><category>Material conditions</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-l-enfermement-a-la-folie</guid></item><item><title>Germany: unsuccessful constitutional complaint challenging electronic monitoring of persons released from prison (‘electronic tagging’)</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/germany-unsuccessful-constitutional-complaint-challenging-electronic-monitoring-of-persons-released-from-prison-electronic-tagging</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            <p>While such electronic monitoring constitutes a very intrusive interference with fundamental rights, in particular with the fundamental right to informational self-determination and the general right of personality following from Art. 2(1) in conjunction with Art. 1(1) of the Basic Law (Grundgesetz – GG), this interference is reasonable (zumutbar) and is not disproportionate in relation to the weight of the legal interests electronic monitoring serves to protect.</p><p>Facts of the case:</p><p>Electronic monitoring was introduced by the Act Reorganising the Law on Preventive Detention and Enacting Provisions Related Thereto (Gesetz zur Neuordnung des Rechts der Sicherungsverwahrung und zu begleitenden Regelungen) of 22 December 2010, which entered into force on 1 January 2011, following the Judgment of the European Court of Human Rights of 17 December 2009, M. v. Germany, no. 19359/04. In this judgment, the European Court of Human Rights held that continued preventive detention after expiry of the maximum period of ten years applicable at the time of conviction violated Convention rights. As a result of the judgment, persons at high risk of recidivism were released from prison and placed under police surveillance, sometimes around the clock. According to legislative intent, electronic monitoring was to replace such surveillance measures. The whereabouts of the persons concerned were to be determined by GPS. For that purpose, an electronic tag had to be attached to the ankle of the persons concerned.</p><p>Electronic monitoring was inserted as measure no. 12 into the catalogue of directions, set out in § 68b(1) first sentence StGB, that can be issued by a court in the context of the supervision of conduct of offenders. Pursuant to § 68b(1) third and fourth sentence StGB, such a measure can essentially be imposed if supervision of conduct was ordered following a prison sentence of at least three years that has been served in full, or a custodial measure of prevention and correction imposed or ordered because the person concerned had committed an offence of the type listed in § 66(3) first sentence StGB, and if there is a risk that the convicted person will commit further qualified criminal offences. Moreover, imposing the measure must appear necessary to prevent the convicted person from committing further qualified criminal offences. Qualified criminal offences include, in particular, offences against life, physical integrity, personal liberty or sexual self-determination as well as offences against public order. The data stored in the context of electronic monitoring by the authority supervising the convicted person’s conduct may only be used without that person’s consent if this is necessary for the purposes specified in § 463a StPO. These purposes include, in particular, the punishment of a breach of a court-ordered direction, the averting of a considerable present danger to weighty legal interests and the prosecution of a qualified criminal offence.</p><p>The complainants were released from prison after having served long sentences and were initially placed under police surveillance. In the context of the supervision of their conduct, the criminal courts ordered electronic monitoring of the complainants, who were then made to wear electronic ankle tags.</p><p>In particular, the complainants claim a violation of Art. 1(1) GG and Art. 2(1) in conjunction with Art. 1(1) GG, both in its manifestation as the right to informational self-determination and in its manifestation as the requirement to seek the social reintegration of offenders (Resozialisierungsgebot). In addition, they assert a violation of Art. 12 GG, Art. 11 GG and Art. 2(2) second sentence GG as well as of Art. 103(2) GG and of the general principle of the protection of legitimate expectations; finally, they also claim a violation of Art. 19(1) second sentence GG.</p><p>Key considerations of the Senate:</p><p>The constitutional complaints are admissible but unfounded.</p><ol><li>The possibility to determine, based on specific grounds, the whereabouts of a person subject to court-ordered directions pursuant to § 68b(1) first sentence no. 12 and § 68b(1) third sentence StGB in conjunction with § 463a(4) StPO does not violate the complainants’ fundamental rights or equivalent rights.</li></ol><p>a) The challenged provisions do not interfere with the guarantee of human dignity under Art. 1(1) GG.</p><p>They merely aim to enable the competent authority to determine the whereabouts of the persons concerned at any time if this is required by specific grounds. Electronic monitoring does not subject the persons concerned to optical or acoustic surveillance, and thus does not cover the activities undertaken by them. Moreover, the legislator prohibited the exact tracking of persons concerned within their home and limited the data to be collected to a determination of their whereabouts. Yet the mere determination of someone’s whereabouts by means of GPS tracking does generally not encroach on the inviolable core of private life, which is beyond the reach of any monitoring by the state.</p><p>Likewise, the electronic determination of someone’s whereabouts does not result in “sweeping surveillance” that would be incompatible with human dignity and turn the persons concerned into mere objects of state action. The data is collected automatically and only provides information on the whereabouts of the persons concerned. While the data required to this end is collected permanently, it only concerns those whereabouts. The level of surveillance arising from electronic monitoring is not so comprehensive as to cover almost all movements and expressions, nor does it allow for the compilation of personality profiles.</p><p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/germany-unsuccessful-constitutional-complaint-challenging-electronic-monitoring-of-persons-released-from-prison-electronic-tagging">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/3817dc2d/actu_europe.png">
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                    Wed, 10 Feb 2021 03:10:00 +0100                </pubDate><category>News</category><category>Europe</category><category>Access to legal rights</category><category>Discipline</category><category>Justice</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/germany-unsuccessful-constitutional-complaint-challenging-electronic-monitoring-of-persons-released-from-prison-electronic-tagging</guid></item><item><title>Germany: state to release some 1,000 prisoners due to coronavirus</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-state-to-release-some-1-000-prisoners-due-to-coronavirus</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            <p>BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany’s most populous state North-Rhine Westphalia plans to release as many as 1,000 prisoners in order to free up cells to be used as quarantine rooms out of concern that coronavirus could spread unchecked in jails, its justice minister said.</p><p>The plan, first reported by Focus magazine, would see prisoners released who only had a short part of their sentence left to run. Sex offenders and those convicted of other violent crimes were explicitly excluded from the scheme, state justice minister Peter Biesenbach said.</p><p>“Right now we have only a handful of free spaces,” Biesenbach told reporters on Wednesday, adding that he expected other German states to follow suit.</p><p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-state-to-release-some-1-000-prisoners-due-to-coronavirus">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/3817dc2d/actu_europe.png">
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                    Mon, 30 Mar 2020 02:34:00 +0200                </pubDate><category>News</category><category>Coronavirus</category><category>Europe</category><category>Health</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-state-to-release-some-1-000-prisoners-due-to-coronavirus</guid></item><item><title>Germany: los &#039;menús de pena&#039; que se sirven en las cárceles</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-los-menus-de-pena-que-se-sirven-en-las-carceles</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            
                    <p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-los-menus-de-pena-que-se-sirven-en-las-carceles">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/3817dc2d/actu_europe.png">
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                    Thu, 05 Sep 2019 04:01:00 +0200                </pubDate><category>News</category><category>Europe</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-los-menus-de-pena-que-se-sirven-en-las-carceles</guid></item><item><title>Allemagne, la prison privatisée</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-la-prison-privatisee</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            <p><em>This article is not available in English. If you wish, you can consult the French version.</em></p><p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-la-prison-privatisee">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/3817dc2d/actu_europe.png">
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                    Sat, 16 Jun 2018 11:10:00 +0200                </pubDate><category>News</category><category>Europe</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-la-prison-privatisee</guid></item><item><title>Allemagne : incarcéré depuis 4 mois suite au G20 de Hambourg, Fabio 19 ans, tient tête à la justice</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-incarcere-depuis-4-mois-suite-au-g20-de-hambourg-fabio-19-ans-tient-tete-a-la-justice</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            <p><em>This article is not available in English. If you wish, you can consult the French version.</em></p><p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-incarcere-depuis-4-mois-suite-au-g20-de-hambourg-fabio-19-ans-tient-tete-a-la-justice">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/3817dc2d/actu_europe.png">
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                    Mon, 27 Nov 2017 12:00:00 +0100                </pubDate><category>News</category><category>Europe</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-incarcere-depuis-4-mois-suite-au-g20-de-hambourg-fabio-19-ans-tient-tete-a-la-justice</guid></item><item><title>Germany: un teatro en una cárcel alemana, contra el extremismo islamista</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-un-teatro-en-una-carcel-alemana-contra-el-extremismo-islamista</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            <p><em>This article is not available in English. If you wish, you can consult the Spanish version.</em></p><p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-un-teatro-en-una-carcel-alemana-contra-el-extremismo-islamista">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/3817dc2d/actu_europe.png">
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                    Fri, 25 Aug 2017 08:09:00 +0200                </pubDate><category>News</category><category>Europe</category><category>Religion</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-un-teatro-en-una-carcel-alemana-contra-el-extremismo-islamista</guid></item><item><title>Germany : prison forced to feed inmates McDonalds</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-german-prison-forced-to-feed-inmates-mcdonalds</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            <p>Prisoners in a small German city are being served cheeseburgers in place of their usual fare after a food contract deal fell through. They can order items up to a value of 4 euros.</p><p>Police in the western German town of Bergisch Gladbach have been ordering takeaway McDonalds for inmates after a food supply contract fell through at the start of March, local media reported on Monday.
The inmates of the short term facility are given the choice of a hamburger, a cheeseburger or a veggieburger for lunch and a McToast with cheese, ham and bacon for breakfast, Cologne tabloid “Express” reported. Bigger burgers were reportedly too expensive.</p><p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-german-prison-forced-to-feed-inmates-mcdonalds">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/3817dc2d/actu_europe.png">
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                    Mon, 06 Mar 2017 12:14:00 +0100                </pubDate><category>News</category><category>Europe</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-german-prison-forced-to-feed-inmates-mcdonalds</guid></item><item><title>Allemagne : le pays épinglé par la CEDH pour ses prisons</title><link>https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-le-pays-epingle-par-la-cedh-pour-ses-prisons</link><description><![CDATA[
                                                            <p>Priver un toxicomane de traitement de substitution à l’héroïne pendant son séjour en prison peut, dans certaines circonstances, être assimilé à un traitement inhumain ou dégradant, a jugé aujourd’hui la Cour européenne des droits de l’Homme dans une affaire concernant l’Allemagne.</p><p><a href="https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-le-pays-epingle-par-la-cedh-pour-ses-prisons">Read more</a></p><img src="https://www.prison-insider.com/assets/w600-q90/3817dc2d/actu_europe.png">
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                    Thu, 01 Sep 2016 12:00:00 +0200                </pubDate><category>News</category><category>Europe</category><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.prison-insider.com/en/articles/allemagne-le-pays-epingle-par-la-cedh-pour-ses-prisons</guid></item>    </channel>
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