Prisoners Abroad

Prisoners Abroad
A hand behind bard reaching towards a hand behind jail bars.
Prisoners Abroad logo
Formation 1978 (1978)
Founder Craig Feehan, Joe Parham, Chris Cheal and Bob Nightingale
Founded at U.K.
Registration no. 1093710
Purpose To support British prisoners overseas
Budget
£1.6 million

Prisoners Abroad is a UK-registered human rights and welfare charity[1] which supports British citizens who are imprisoned overseas. It also works with ex-prisoners returning to the UK and family members and friends of those detained.

The organisation provides humanitarian aid, advice and emotional support to people affected by overseas imprisonment. They assist British citizens during their incarceration, when they return to the UK and need access to resettlement services, and they support their family and friends throughout the trauma.

Prisoners Abroad translates human rights law into practical life-saving actions by providing access to vitamins and essential food, emergency medical care, freepost envelopes to keep in touch with home and books and magazines to help sustain mental health.

History

Prisoners Abroad was formed in 1978 by Craig Feehan, Joe Parham, Chris Cheal and Bob Nightingale. Initially it worked with Britons held mainly in Turkey, central Asia and north Africa. Last year they supported 1,669 Britons imprisoned across the world in over 100 countries.

In UK terms, Prisoners Abroad is a small to medium-sized charity, with an annual turnover of £1.6 million.

Welfare grants

The Craig Feehan Fund, which was founded after Craig Feehan's death in 1984, provides those imprisoned in particularly poor conditions with a monthly sum of money for essentials such as bedding, food, clothing, toiletries, vitamins, newspapers and correspondence. The fund provides help to those who are destitute and have no other source of income.[2]

A vitamin fund is available to people imprisoned in countries where the nutrition is deemed inadequate for survival.

Medical grants are awarded on a case by case basis for treatment of medical issues ranging from blood pressure medication to eyeglasses to major surgeries. The funds also address diseases commonly found in foreign prisons, such as tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS.

Prisoners Abroad is a non-judgmental organisation and provides assistance on the basis of need and regardless of innocence or guilt.

Support for families

Each year Prisoners Abroad provides assistance to more than 1,400 family members. This includes one-to-one support via a helpline, a private online network for family members, as well as hosting family support groups around the country and arranging overseas visits.

Resettlement

Prisoners Abroad's work also extends to a resettlement service that supports those who return to the UK; they find them somewhere to stay, provide grants for food and travel, and help them take the vital steps to a new life.

Awards and patrons

In 2007 Prisoners Abroad was awarded the Longford Prize,[3] awarded annually by the Longford Trust to "recognise the contribution of an individual, group or organisation working in the area of penal or social reform who/which has shown outstanding qualities of humanity, courage, persistence and originality".[4]

In 2008 Prisoners Abroad were shortlisted for the Justice Awards and the Andy Ludlow London Homelessness Awards.

In 2010 Prisoners Abroad won the Guardian Public Service Awards, Carers, Families and Communities.

Prominent patrons include the Archbishop of Westminster, Sir David Wootton, Dame Harriet Walter, Jon Snow, John Walters, Bishop James Langstaff, Dominic Grieve QC and Lord Ramsbotham.

References

  1. Charity Commission. Prisoners Abroad, registered charity no. 1093710.
  2. Craig Feehan Fund. Prisoners Abroad.
  3. "The Longford Trust". Longford Trust. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
  4. "The Longford Prize". Longford Trust. Archived from the original on May 4, 2006. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
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