Addressed to the : Houses' of Parliament
Ann Whittaker
Subjected-Under-Review:
Review-Title:
Young womens' detention's
Sub-Title:
Care-set-plans', during pregnancy
It is with extreme due concern, how many young women are being subjected to forced-shared-accommodations', on prison grounds', with far older-more dangerous and more experienced criminal enterprises' of higher-ranking-criminal-women, whereby they are subjected to internal emotional blackmails', alongside being subjected to lesbian abuses' of un-noted attacks', leaving these young women feeling helpless, with the on-set of depressions' and suicidal missions'.
In this, I would like to address another concerning issue, regarding women in pregnancy during imprisonment:
Under current law, all women, regardless of age, crime and or other legitimate circumstance, are being denied the right to maintain-after-birth and child care during detainment on prison grounds'.
This goes against the rights of the individual woman's right to claim legal bases' by injunction of court permission to keep their children until further release and resettlement.
Though we as legal representatives and law administrations' know that all women have the rights to obtain such legal grounds', most convicted women are unable to put a legitimate case forward pending on hearings', because of the lack of English etiquette's and educational knowledge.
In this, also, we will find, by national record data base, that many young women and or older women , for small crime abuses', are being persecuted by government laws', in having this extreme illogical interaction of social care interventions' whereby and thereafter their small infant child's are taken from them, by immediate force, into the hands of t he authorities', that can also lead to these women feeling helpless, emotional, depressive and suicidal, and many young women committing and or dying at the hands of suicide, due to a direct result of these imposing measures'.
it would be more befitting, if there was a measure whereby, pregnant mothers, and thereafter born infants', be sectioned off, into small housing bungalow accommodations', bordering the main prison enterprises', whereby they learn to sow, knit and other inter-connective skills', whereby their items can go directly to the hospital units' for washing, and handing to smaller infants that are in need of basic baby items'.
In this, these ladies' will be able to serve their time, leaving a relatively standard life, committing to a complete community service throughout the number of years' they are detained for, depending on good behavior and agreement under contract.
Any one woman denying to sign a peaceful term of contracting learning skills', and this high profile community service, will remain under the present laws' that are and have been implemented, as those particular inmates' may have ulterior motives to stay where they are.
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