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Welcome To Hmp Belmarsh With Ross Kemp S01E02
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00:01I'm spending six months inside HMP Belmarsh, Britain's most notorious high
00:07security prison. It's locked up the country's most dangerous convicts from
00:13the great train robber Ronnie Biggs to Ian Huntley and the killers of Stephen
00:18Lawrence. No bed, no toilet. I don't think I can do an hour in here without going down the toilet.
00:24But what happens here has remained virtually unknown cameras have never been
00:30granted full access to this jail until now. So far I've seen how Belmarsh deals
00:38with its volatile mix of in from high-profile prisoners and gangs this is
00:50to common criminals. I'm not guilty. I've learned that being locked up here can
00:58affect anyone. You seem very emotional now. Yeah. Now I want to see what it takes to
01:04survive within these walls. Is there a lot to it than just getting up and walking out of a door?
01:10I've been given unprecedented access to spend the night in a cell in Belmarsh.
01:16I'm thinking about all the different people that have been through this cell.
01:19I'll meet the prison's only transgender inmates. Oh my god, I'm the old one out here.
01:26Come across a new type of terrorists. I will attack ISIS members.
01:31And I'll meet the staff who must step in. How can we, bro? To deal with the jail's most vulnerable
01:37and unpredictable prisoners. Would you kill someone? If I have to, yeah, definitely. Why not?
01:43Please, release me, let me go.
01:46Welcome to Belmarsh.
01:55Built in 1991, Belmarsh was the UK's first supermax jail. Designed to take in prisoners
02:04considered a threat to national security. Besides its very own dog unit and a bomb-proof tunnel
02:12linking it to Woodwich Crown Court, Belmarsh has one thing that truly sets it apart from other prisons.
02:21It has the only jail within a jail in England and Wales.
02:28Thank you. Thank you.
02:30This is the High Security Unit, or HSU, that's held some of the world's most dangerous terrorists.
02:38And this place has been home to people like Abu Hamza and the killers of Lee Rigby.
02:44But Belmarsh is having to deal with a new kind of prisoner.
02:49Just through those gates are anti-Islamic and anti-ISIS inmates who can't be released into the general population
02:57for fear of attacks and reprisals.
03:01One of those is Darren Osborne, the murderer who drove his van into a crowd outside Finsbury Park Mosque in
03:092017.
03:14Also here is Aidan James, the only Brit charged with terror offences for fighting against ISIS in Syria.
03:26It's Monday morning, and HSU inmates are returning to their cells after exercise, including Aidan James in the red T
03:35-shirt.
03:37Without warning, James violently attacks another prisoner with a pull cue.
03:44As a consequence, he is taken from the HSU to one of the cells in the main prison segregation unit,
03:52designed to hold Belmarsh's most disruptive convicts.
03:56James, come up to your door so I can speak to you.
03:58He has a history of self-harm, suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder,
04:03and has just cut himself with some plastic cutlery.
04:06I can see, I can see you've hurt yourself, you're hitting your cheek, and I can see your arms damaged
04:10as well.
04:11Are you going to self-harm anymore?
04:14All I'm saying is, be patient, try not to do anything until we can get the doctor to come down
04:19and speak to you.
04:20OK?
04:21The concern now is that Aidan James' self-harming could escalate before medics reach it.
04:31The rest of Belmarsh's convicts are nearly all held across its four main house blocks.
04:37Each one capable of taking over 200 men.
04:43As head of safety, it's Adrian Knight's job to know where every inmate is at all times.
04:50Every prisoner on this house block is on this border.
04:54So how many are there?
04:55Today, we've got 197.
04:57There's 13 catas among this lot.
04:59Category A prisoners are the country's most dangerous and violent inmates.
05:06They make up around 10% of Belmarsh's population.
05:09The majority are sent here from the Old Bailey and Woolwich Crown Court.
05:14Men like Usman Khan, the London Bridge attacker who once spent time on this very wing for a previous terror
05:22plot.
05:23So, Adrian, if you were to look on this particular spur...
05:26So, there's probably around 70 prisoners in that spur right now.
05:29There's five catas, around 12 gang members.
05:32And they're mixed in with burglars, robbers.
05:36Is Belmarsh different to every other prisoner in the UK?
05:39Belmarsh is unique.
05:41We'll take prisoners that are very high profile.
05:43We'll take the highest escape risk prisoners.
05:46Prisoners in for multiple murders.
05:48There's not one prisoner that we won't take.
05:50One in five of the convicts here is serving time for murder.
05:55But there's a killer on the third floor of House Block 3 who's not what you might expect.
06:03Every morning, get myself looking as best I can in here.
06:07You've got to make sure that before the door opens, you've got everything done.
06:12Eyeliner, mascara, foundation.
06:16Because you don't want people seeing you without make-up looking horrible.
06:23Claire Derbyshire is Belmarsh's only transgender inmate.
06:28Born Christopher, she's 39 and has been living as a woman since her early 20s.
06:34Claire, nice to meet you.
06:36You too.
06:37Shall we have a sit down?
06:37Yeah, of course you can.
06:39You're the only woman prisoner in Belmarsh, aren't you?
06:42Yes, that is.
06:43At first I found that very daunting.
06:46It was kind of like, oh my God, I'm the odd one out here.
06:50What are the other inmates going to be like?
06:53How are they going to treat me as a trans person?
06:56Can you give me some indication of some of the things that they say to you?
06:59Just stuff like, um, queer, tranny.
07:03You get some saying, oh, show us your tits.
07:06Were you worried that you might be sexually abused here?
07:10Um, there was always that in the back of my mind, what could happen.
07:15You know, the officers can't always be by your side, so I was always on edge.
07:21So how long have you been here?
07:23I've been here three years, eight months now.
07:27As a pre-op trans prisoner, Claire wasn't given the choice of a women's jail.
07:33And when she arrived here, she rarely left her cell.
07:37It's Belmarsh.
07:38It's intimidating, scary.
07:42You expect the worst.
07:44She now has a job as a cleaner, which means that she can come out when most other inmates are
07:49locked up.
07:51I've learned the best times for me to be out and about.
07:55The best times for me not to be out and about.
07:58So far, Claire's managed to avoid any trouble.
08:03I consider myself to have been very lucky.
08:09Back in the segregation unit, Aidan James is struggling and continuing to cut himself with a broken spoon.
08:17You have got something that you've done the cuts with on your arm and your face,
08:21and I'm not happy to come in at the moment, mate, and deal with it.
08:24I'm speaking to the healthcare, right, and they're doing their utmost to contact Dr Daly, okay?
08:28All I'm saying is be patient, try not to do anything.
08:31If you start to feel dizzy, right, because of any loss of blood, sit down.
08:35With James still self-harming, staff must move him to one of the constant watch cells
08:41in the prison's healthcare unit, run by clinical psychiatrist Dr Rachel Daly.
08:47Because I don't want to bring up Aidan now.
08:49How is that?
08:50No, that's why I need to get this sort of face.
08:52Dr Daly, we can take off constant jobs.
08:55There are only three constant watch cells in healthcare, and right now they're all full.
09:02That is unworkable.
09:03There's not even anyone due to be discharged today, is there?
09:05No.
09:06Dr Daly sends a nurse to the segregation unit to assess James's injuries.
09:11Why do you have to do it?
09:13Your face and your cheek also.
09:15I've got P testing, the illusion for me to say.
09:18So is that the reason why you are cutting your cell?
09:20Exactly, T-tops today, please.
09:24Hello, healthcare, we're bruh.
09:26Healthcare scramble to free up one of the cells.
09:31Okay, right, the time is 14.44.
09:33James is a volatile category A inmate.
09:37To move him, the prison has to call upon a team of specially trained officers in full riot gear.
09:43He's got a broken spoon in his cell, and we're not fully sure that he's going to comply with the
09:48instructions to come out of the cell.
09:49He's in the seg now, they've got a team ready to do a plan removal on him now and bring
09:53him up here.
09:54Where are the spaces coming from?
09:55We're having to move some people around.
09:57Okay.
09:59As the minutes tick by, James suddenly starts to smash his head against his cell wall.
10:06Okay, we'll do.
10:07Finally, healthcare free up a cell.
10:12Officers get the go-ahead.
10:13Teams go in, we place him in to cuff.
10:17Okay.
10:19But have no idea how James will react.
10:30Let's get a team ready.
10:31In Belmarsh's segregation unit, six specially trained officers are preparing to move dangerous prisoner Aidan James,
10:39who has been cutting himself and smashing his head against his cell wall.
10:44Okay, James, we're going to move you up to healthcare.
10:46Are you going to walk out of the cell in compliance?
10:48I don't want to fight, you know.
10:50They have riot shields and protective clothing.
10:54As James seriously assaulted another convict earlier today.
10:58And he's now made an improvised weapon from broken colour.
11:02Is to go to the back of the cell and put your hands on your head.
11:05Can you just put that weapon, put that on the floor for me, please.
11:09All right, hands on your head.
11:12Listen to this team.
11:16I want you to walk out forward to me.
11:27Aidan James suffers from PTSD after fighting against ISIS in Syria.
11:33Charged with terror offences, he's been in Belmarsh for 15 months awaiting trial.
11:43Right now, staff must get into a constant watch cell in the healthcare unit.
11:51Here, he can be monitored around the clock.
11:55James is well known to Dr Daly, who's been treating him in Belmarsh.
12:00What are you doing to yourself? Look at your face.
12:04Mr. James, what is wrong?
12:11You need another officer. Tony, no, no, you need another officer.
12:16Mr. James, this is unusual. I thought you were doing okay.
12:20Mr. James got worse.
12:22Mr. James got worse. What happened?
12:24Mr. I ended up having a fight on this day.
12:25Mr. Who did you fight with?
12:27Mr. Someone disrespected me about my PTSD.
12:29Mr. So, I smashed the pool.
12:31Mr. That's not great.
12:33Mr. Now, are you taking your meds, darling?
12:35Mr. Yeah, I'm taking them.
12:36Mr. You're very stressed.
12:38Mr. You'll stay here until I think you're doing okay.
12:40Mr. Calm right down now.
12:41James is 28 and the only British man charged for fighting against ISIS.
12:48Mr. Well, I think he was in the pub in Liverpool, drunk, and he thinks it's a good idea to
12:52go to
12:52Syria and fight with the Kurds, right? To go out to Syria fighting with the Kurds.
12:57Mr. Really?
12:58Mr. Totally traumatised by it.
12:59Mr. So, we treated the trauma.
13:01He had lots of psychology and medication for the trauma.
13:03Mr. You've seen our nursing...
13:04Mr. Belmarsh has the largest healthcare unit of any prison in the UK, able to house up to 30 patients.
13:12Mr. Can you just give me the idea of the spectrum that comes through healthcare?
13:15Mr. Well, we'll have some people coming up with rare neurological conditions.
13:19Mr. We had a young man last week, multiple sclerosis, who joined us up here.
13:22Mr. And then there's, of course, the trauma, the fights on the house block, broken noses,
13:26Mr. Broken jaws, broken arms. So, a full range, like you'd expect in any general population.
13:31Mr. So, are you frightened...
13:32Mr. But Dr. Daley's not running your average surgery.
13:36Mr. Would you kill someone?
13:37Mr. If I have to, yeah, definitely. Why not?
13:39Mr. Providing medical care for other inmates, including serial rapists,
13:45and murderers, many with mental health issues, poses extreme challenges.
13:52Security is on another level here.
13:57With six times more staff per inmate than the rest of the jail.
14:03Mr. You're dealing with some really violent, unpredictable human beings.
14:08They all come with a story, but we have to remove ourselves from what they've done to their healthcare
14:13and see them as another individual. And this is the NHS where we care for everyone.
14:18Besides its complex mix of difficult prisoners, Belmarsh deals with inmates of all ages.
14:24The youngest here is 18, and the oldest, 93 years old.
14:30Some of these men have spent most of their adult lives behind bars.
14:35And so have some of the staff.
14:39Oh, my Lord. Why can't I go anywhere without having to see you?
14:44Whatever prison I work in, you're always there.
14:46And I promise I'll always stand by you, Jenny.
14:49Oh, you're the only one who calls me Jenny as well.
14:52Deputy Governor Jenny Louie joined the prison service 32 years ago.
14:57She's been in Belmarsh for the last nine years.
15:00Mr. Keane has known me when I was living young.
15:05I want to see paint on the walls, not on your clothing.
15:0853-year-old William Keane has been in prison 23 times,
15:13and is currently serving six years for burglary.
15:16It's 30 years you've known me.
15:17We were teenagers.
15:1930 years.
15:20You've both known each other inside the prison system.
15:22The majority of all of these here are going to get dumped out of prison,
15:26back onto the same thing, and keep coming back all the time.
15:28That's all that's going to happen. That's happened year in, year after.
15:31Not the majority. You're the only person I see.
15:34I'll always be back, just because we've got this thing going on.
15:37I know you're marrying me one day.
15:38She still won't turn around and give in to my grounds.
15:40Let's get upstairs. Go. Go.
15:42Nice to meet you. Thank you.
15:44So do you see that a lot?
15:46You do see people coming back, and I think if you can achieve some of those elements,
15:51like housing, employment, if you can achieve that,
15:55that is so much more to ensure that somebody won't come back inside.
15:59For some, Belmarsh is a revolving door.
16:02For others, it's some more permanent homes.
16:06All right, come in.
16:09How are we?
16:10Yeah.
16:11So you two, you seem quite, er, what's the word?
16:13Yes.
16:14Yeah.
16:15Cell mates Lee Sales and Patrick Malloy, both in for violent GBH offences,
16:20know what it takes to do time.
16:23Why not? I'm doing 21 years.
16:25Yeah.
16:25You'll do it, will you do...?
16:27No, I will do 16 at that.
16:28My parole, first parole is 2028, and then if not, 33.
16:33My daughter, my daughter's 16 on Friday.
16:35They're in Benidorm now, so...
16:37Does that not kill you, though?
16:38Yes.
16:39Yes, it does, it does kill you, yeah.
16:41Yeah, yeah.
16:41We're hoping that you're going to help us with the parole book.
16:45It is what it is, isn't it?
16:46Right, yeah.
16:47I'm doing 10, you know?
16:48Light work, though.
16:49Light work?
16:50Light work, yeah.
16:51Listen, the human body is built to adapt.
16:55You don't realise...
16:56Weird, we thought that, didn't we?
16:57Until you actually get yourself in that situation,
16:59the body is actually stronger than what you think.
17:01You have to survive, don't you?
17:02Yeah.
17:03Do you know what I mean? You have to, like...
17:04If you don't in here, they'll spot, but you'll become a victim, mate.
17:07Yeah, of course you would, of course you would, yeah.
17:09You're going to fall apart, or else you get big, one of the two.
17:11What don't kill you makes you stronger.
17:13And if you ain't strong in here, things happen.
17:19Someone who has had to adapt fast to life in Belmarsh
17:22is transgender prisoner, Claire Derbyshire.
17:26Prison does harden you.
17:28You have no choice but to accept prison,
17:32or it will eat you away.
17:36Claire arrived here in 2016 after her court case at the Old Bailey hit the headlines.
17:44My mum died in 2008.
17:49And I've been looking after my dad ever since.
17:53He had MS, he was bed-bound, he wanted to commit suicide,
17:58but couldn't do it on his own, and I helped him.
18:02Well, he decided he wanted to be suffocated.
18:06He said that would be easiest, because at least then he could have a hand in it.
18:11He could hold the bag.
18:19And I laid behind him and held the back of the bag.
18:25His breathing got quicker and quicker, and then slower.
18:34And there was one last breath.
18:38And then you had gone.
18:41Like all murderers, she received a life sentence.
18:45But the judge accepted Claire's plea that it was an act of mercy,
18:49and gave her one of the lowest minimum terms in British legal history.
18:54Just four years.
18:56I was going to commit suicide.
19:00I had no reason to live without my dad.
19:04But I couldn't do it.
19:06Something I still feel bad about, I should have gone with him.
19:11Like others convicted at the Old Bailey,
19:14Claire would have known she'd be coming to Belmarsh.
19:18Its reputation as a tough environment precedes it,
19:22and arriving here can be frightening.
19:25But when this is the last place you expect to end up,
19:28it must be especially daunting.
19:32100 miles away in a Category B prison,
19:3620 inmates have broken out of their cells,
19:38causing a full-scale riot, with the footage shared online.
19:4412 hours later, two of the main suspects are shipped to Belmarsh,
19:49in distinctive E-list or escape-list uniforms,
19:52and move straight into the Segregation Unit,
19:56where one of them is already making himself heard.
19:59No!
20:01You've got to feed me!
20:03I want my food!
20:05Right, I offered you your food,
20:07and then you started giving it the bigger, didn't you?
20:09You see what I mean?
20:11Showing your true colours now, isn't you?
20:13Listen to me.
20:14I'm taking your number.
20:15You're taking your number, I don't care about that.
20:17You're going to speak to me as an adult.
20:18You're taking my shit, bro!
20:20You're out.
20:20See you later.
20:21Please get my food.
20:22Welcome to Belmarsh!
20:25The other new arrival is 20-year-old Liam Waters.
20:29You all right?
20:30I'm worried.
20:31You know where you are now?
20:33In the high security prison in the country.
20:34Right, so just tell me why you're here.
20:36I'm here because of the security basin.
20:39Prison mutiny, that's what they call it.
20:40You're OK in the SEG for now?
20:42I'm OK in the SEG, mate.
20:43I just don't know, I just don't know,
20:45because I don't know anything about you.
20:46You don't come across as someone that should be in the SEG,
20:48but I've obviously got to go with what I'm being told.
20:51Come on.
20:51Nice to meet you.
20:52Nice to meet you.
20:55It'll be on the E-list for a considerable time now
20:57while we work out and what to do with them.
21:00Obviously, one's quite a young guy.
21:01That's why I still find it difficult in the prison.
21:03It'll be a big step up for him compared to what he's used to.
21:08As an escapeless prisoner, Liam Waters is now considered high risk.
21:13He won't be allowed contact with the outside world,
21:16and his every move will be monitored.
21:19Obviously, this is all new to me.
21:21Being shipped here is crazy.
21:24Balmast, ACAT, high security.
21:28I believe it's one of the most dangerous places to be
21:31in the whole of England, prison-wide.
21:33I know there's gangs here, there's terrorists here.
21:36All I've got to do really is pray.
21:38Pray that I get out of here as quick as possible.
21:48When night falls in Belmarsh,
21:50the reality of life behind bars can hit newcomers hardest.
21:58Every year, over 4,000 inmates come through its gates.
22:03All new prisoners coming into Belmarsh are brought here to House Block 3,
22:08and into the first night centre.
22:11Each prisoner is allocated a cell, and contact with the outside world is now by appointment only.
22:18If I've got mum, dad, brother, sister, girlfriend, whoever on here, get that handed in as quick as you can.
22:24Tyron Brooks has just been transferred from another prison.
22:28This will be the first night of what could be a five-year stretch here.
22:32Is this your first time in Belmarsh?
22:35Second time.
22:36Second time.
22:37Yeah.
22:38And how many other prisons have you spent time in?
22:41A good few. Over 10.
22:4310?
22:44Yeah. I've been about.
22:47Why do they keep moving you?
22:49A whole host of things. You can have a fight and get rid of you.
22:54Belmarsh has a reputation for being a tough prison.
22:58Does that not concern you?
23:00It's ruthless. It's vicious in here. All gangs, you know what I mean?
23:03A lot of the young fellas in here, they've got problems.
23:06What follows them from the outside world?
23:09A lot of it's in people's heads.
23:11They smoke drugs. They get paranoid.
23:13He's coming for me. He's watching me.
23:16He's not.
23:18I used to be like that, but I'm grown up now.
23:20I'm nearly 30, you know what I mean?
23:21I've been coming to jail for 10 years, unfortunately.
23:25What's your advice to anyone coming to prison?
23:27If you're first time, it's new, isn't it?
23:29Everything's new. The noise, the keys, the smell.
23:32Keep yourself to yourself. Take it day by day.
23:36This is where prisoners get a taste of what's on Belmarsh's menu.
23:41I know people are going to moan about it,
23:42but I've been to some other places around the world,
23:45and this is very nice.
23:47But that doesn't mean I'd want to eat it every day.
23:50Soon, the moment comes for inmates to go behind the door for the first time.
23:57Unaware of who they'll be sharing with, and what crimes they may have committed.
24:03Cheers, gents. Have a good evening.
24:09Every night, all 900 inmates are locked up for 14 hours.
24:14In the morning, bro.
24:15From 6pm to 8am.
24:19And tonight, I will be two.
24:22And while I can never know what it's truly like to be a prisoner here,
24:27I am about to spend a night in Belmarsh.
24:33Cheers.
24:50I'm the first non-prisoner to be granted permission by the Ministry of Justice
24:56to spend the night in a UK prison cell.
25:00Like every inmate, I've been given what's called a first-night pack.
25:06Let's see what we've got in here.
25:09Body wash gel.
25:12It's going to come in.
25:15Summer's been very funny.
25:17A lot of shampoo. That's going to be very handy as well.
25:20Now, it's about 33 degrees inside this cell.
25:35I know this is only for one night, but when that door closes,
25:41I'm lucky I've got a cell to myself, a three-man cell.
25:45That has a totally different ballgame because you are dealing with the pecking order,
25:50you are dealing with the politics of three individuals living,
25:56breathing in each other's farts,
26:01breathing in each other's bad breath,
26:04breathing in each other's smells when they go to the toilet.
26:12Locked in a ten-foot-by-seven-foot box, I'm struggling to sleep.
26:19I'm thinking about the different people that have been through this cell.
26:25It's an old people that have no idea,
26:30contemplating what we did or didn't do.
26:35How we managed to find ourselves here.
26:40At home they'll be spending here.
26:46Plot of revenge.
26:49And the regrets.
26:53It's all nowhere.
26:56Three hours and still no sleep.
27:04There's no conversations happening now.
27:07There's people shouting now, I can't think of what they're saying.
27:12You have to be mentally tough to be able to survive in a place like this.
27:17Not only physically tough, you'd have to be mentally tough.
27:22No matter how hard your night has been,
27:24I mean, at 8am sharp, Bellmarsh comes to life.
27:31As soon as you're ready and long, please.
27:34Foundations have changed, young evidence.
27:3618, beach, I can't.
27:39I've got education, yeah?
27:44Morning.
27:46Morning.
27:49All right?
27:50I've got better nights, I've got worse.
27:52Happy days.
27:54I would be a liar if I said I wasn't relieved to be getting out.
28:04On every house block, 12 officers must try to smoothly manage the comings and goings
28:10of its volatile mix of prisoners.
28:13Where's the Britta?
28:15Why is he out?
28:16Well behaved inmates have the right to be out of their cells for up to four hours a day
28:21to head to education, visits and workshops.
28:26Favourite term is if you've got like 70 kittens and they've all got their own box.
28:33And then each kitten doesn't go in their box, it's chaos.
28:37This is exactly what this is, absolute chaos.
28:43Alex Nerven, who is in for GBH, was considered such a threat outside,
28:48the police told the public to keep away from him.
28:51But in here, even stepping out on the landing is a challenge.
28:56Walking out the door first thing in the morning on a wing,
28:59if you're going to be honest, it is scary.
29:02You never know how that day is going to go.
29:04Is it going to be you today?
29:05Your body language has always got to be on point.
29:08You never know how someone else is going to act.
29:10Are you going to look at someone, they're going to take it the wrong way
29:13and then automatically they're going to act on you.
29:15There's a lot to it than just getting up and walking out the door.
29:19And you think Bill Maher should be one of the gills that you'd be safe in, wouldn't you?
29:22High security, Nick. Far from there.
29:27In a place like this, there's potential for violence, confrontation,
29:33every second of the day.
29:35It's always bubbling away.
29:40Fights happen daily, leaving staff battling to maintain control.
29:49In this footage, captured on an officer's body camera,
29:53staff restrain a man caught fighting.
29:58As eight officers move into the segregation unit,
30:01they're unaware that one of his enemies is waiting in a nearby shower block.
30:15Anyone can become a target in here.
30:19It's three days since Liam Waters was transferred to Belmarsh after a riot in another prison.
30:26He's just been moved from the segregation unit onto house block three, where I spent the night.
30:32How different is Belmarsh?
30:35Very different.
30:36It's not nice.
30:38I mean, another time you hear a lot more shouting and stuff and horrible place.
30:43Yeah, I'm just trying to keep my head down.
30:44There's more pressure here?
30:46Yeah.
30:46Especially being dressed up and less, yeah.
30:48They're still treating you as an E-list prisoner?
30:51I get me fork and knife taken away from me at night time.
30:55And my plate and my clothes, shoes.
30:58Do you know what's going to happen to you now?
31:02I don't have a say in what goes on here.
31:04For all I know, I could be standing for my whole sentence.
31:09Belmarsh can be a tough place to survive.
31:12Like all jails, mental health issues here are on the rise.
31:17No, I don't know what it's doing to my head.
31:22Isolation, bullying and drugs can all play their part and often lead to self-harm and sometimes suicide attempts.
31:34Pressures from outside the jail can push people to breaking point too.
31:40Last night, Alex Nertham was moved to a constant watch cell in healthcare.
31:46Having been told that his girlfriend was seeing someone else, he tried to hang himself.
31:52I had some news from someone about something with the missus which turned out not to be true.
31:58I don't know, it just kind of all hit home, really.
32:03I ripped off a length of bed sheet.
32:05Then I woke up with them kind of off my neck and basically trying to put me in a recovery
32:10position.
32:11Because I went blue and stopped breathing.
32:15I thought it would be quick and easy.
32:19Turned out, it weren't meant to be.
32:22With healthcare once again full and many more prisoners waiting to come here,
32:27Dr Daly and her team must quickly assess whether Nertham remains a suicide risk.
32:33Mr Nertham, at this moment in time, out of 10, between 0 I'm going to kill myself and 10 I'm
32:38having a party, where are you?
32:40Three.
32:41I wouldn't want you to kill yourself.
32:43We'll be doing everything to prevent it.
32:45So we need to work out what's going on for you.
32:48You're in prison, she might break up, what are we going to do about that?
32:50I don't know, I just have to deal with it, I suppose.
32:52I suppose you'll have to.
32:54So we need to have you in healthcare, working with us, you need to work your way into therapies.
32:59What's going to work for you? How am I going to cope?
33:01How am I going to work through issues, right? Simple stuff, yeah?
33:04Yeah, I appreciate it.
33:05So we will sort out your meds and we will see you again later in the week.
33:09As long as Nertham is deemed at risk of taking his own life, he'll remain in healthcare.
33:15When someone declares that they want to commit suicide, how do you stop them?
33:21How do you keep them alive?
33:22Well, I suppose we have to look at, are they truly suicidal?
33:26Is there an underlying mental health problem? Are they depressed? Are they psychotic?
33:29Are they in a crisis? In cases like Nertham, they struggle with their relationships,
33:34like they struggle with everything else in life.
33:35Is it the job of healthcare to keep people alive?
33:39Yes, of course. And we want them to have hope.
33:41Because if you haven't got hope, how do you carry on the journey in life?
33:45For many prisoners, it's their relationships outside jail that keep them going.
33:51But for Claire Derbyshire, who served most of her sentence on the same wing,
33:56it's the close bonds that she's formed inside that help her get by.
34:01I've got a select group of people that are my friends.
34:05People that have been really good to me in here.
34:08I know they've got my back. They look out for me.
34:12And they have something for her on a very special day.
34:17Happy birthday, Claire.
34:18That's for you.
34:18Oh, thank you.
34:22Oh, wow.
34:23Big 4-0.
34:25From the guys on the land.
34:26To my bad bitch, happy birthday.
34:30To my jail wifey for life.
34:33How important is that to you?
34:34It means a lot because it's just, all these people care. It's lovely.
34:41Belmarsh has been good for me.
34:43I don't hear that very often.
34:45No.
34:46But Claire could be facing a big change in her life.
34:50After nearly four years inside,
34:52she will soon find out if a parole panel will be allowing her to leave Belmarsh behind.
34:58I've been on this spur about two and a half years now.
35:03So it's, it has become my home.
35:08Weird.
35:16Home for Aidan James remains the healthcare unit.
35:20He's reacting well to treatment for PTSD.
35:24But as a high-risk CATA prisoner,
35:26he can only be unlocked when other prisoners are banged up
35:29and must be accompanied by two officers.
35:34You all right?
35:35Feeling quite nicely.
35:36Yeah, it's getting better.
35:37Yeah, you need to behave.
35:39I'm always on my best behavior.
35:40James is still awaiting trial on terror charges for fighting ISIS in Syria.
35:45What made you want to go and fight with the Kurds?
35:49After the Manchester Arena attack was when, when I thought, right,
35:54I want to go and do something about it.
35:56I left everything.
35:58I left my family, my son.
36:00I left everything because I felt so strongly about fighting against ISIS.
36:07This is my British guy, Ollie Hall, who got killed when he was over there with me.
36:12This is me in the middle.
36:14It's looking rather different.
36:16Yeah.
36:17Shaved head, Natasha.
36:18Yeah.
36:19So you are with your AK, yeah.
36:21That's you again, is it?
36:22Yeah.
36:22How much fighting did you actually see?
36:26Quite a lot.
36:26I spent five months on the front line.
36:29Liberated three villages.
36:30Yeah.
36:32Rescued thousands of people from death, basically.
36:36Daily, we were getting suicide vehicle attacks on us.
36:40But there were British people out there who joined ISIS.
36:43Yeah, there is.
36:45There was many.
36:45And there's British people.
36:47Being held.
36:48In this prison now who fought for ISIS.
36:50Yeah, I know.
36:51How does that make you feel?
36:53Angry.
36:53But that's why they've got to keep me separated.
36:56There's no chance of me going on main house box.
36:59I'm not allowed.
37:00Simply because if I did, I will attack ISIS members.
37:04You will?
37:05Definitely.
37:06You're not anti-Islam.
37:08You were just anti-
37:09ISIS.
37:10Nothing against Islam whatsoever.
37:13But while he awaits trial, staff have little choice but to keep Aidan James in healthcare.
37:20He can't go back into the high security unit because he's attacked.
37:24He can't go into the main prison because there's a price on his head and his own admittance.
37:29He will attack anyone that he thinks is in ISIS or associated to ISIS.
37:34So where do you put him?
37:36And he's just one individual amongst the 900 other prisoners here.
37:54It's ten days since Belmarsh took in two prisoners accused of rioting in another jail.
38:01I'm just going to be speaking to Waters up here.
38:04And they're happy that one of them, 20-year-old Liam Waters, is no longer a risk to their regime.
38:12I don't know.
38:13Walter, is you awake?
38:14Yeah.
38:15Let's just turn the light on.
38:16You've got some good news.
38:17I don't know.
38:17How long have you been E-List for?
38:19I don't know.
38:20You're ages.
38:20You've been taken off of it.
38:22Right, which means that we'll get you some clothes that you can wear.
38:26Unlikely.
38:27You can have a phone call to your mum because you didn't have your induction
38:31call when you came in.
38:32Brilliant news.
38:39All right, put this light on.
38:41I'll wait for you.
38:42As soon as you're ready, we'll go down, okay?
38:43Wait, what?
38:44I let my phone call down.
38:45Yeah.
38:46So sure.
38:46Finally get an open costume.
38:48I think he didn't stop by.
38:50I don't know if that'll fit me.
38:58As an E-Lister, Liam's not been allowed to call home.
39:02Connect them.
39:03Until now.
39:06Hello, Mum, you all right?
39:10Hello.
39:11Finally.
39:12Oh, not yet.
39:16No, no, no, not yet.
39:17Because I'm going to need clothes and stuff and my shoes.
39:21They give me size seven.
39:23Toes are cramped up in them.
39:27That's it.
39:29Time up.
39:31The police are still investigating the riot,
39:34and Liam has no idea how long he might be in Belmarsh.
39:38It must be quite daunting for someone of his age, 20 years old,
39:42in an area that he doesn't know, with people that he doesn't know.
39:46The young lads like him would try and keep an extra eye on them.
39:50Cheers, mate.
39:55Give me a pair of flip-flops.
39:56These are size four, man.
39:58I'm size nine.
40:03Liam might not have the right footwear,
40:05but at least staff are looking out for him.
40:10The relationship between prisoners and officers goes a long way,
40:14which is where a lot of people go wrong.
40:16They come in and it's sort of like, oh, they're the enemy.
40:20You reap what you sow.
40:21You're decent with them, they're decent with you.
40:24It makes prison life so much easier.
40:27Hair dye is banned here, as peroxide can be used to make explosives.
40:32But after nearly four years, staff have something for Claire.
40:38I have.
40:39They've found a Belmarsh-friendly variety.
40:43Mahogany.
40:44Claire, apparently you've been asking for this for some time.
40:47Oh, excellent.
40:49Oh, thank you.
40:49Oh, thank you.
40:50Go easy.
40:50I will.
40:51Thank you very much.
40:51You know, we don't want to go too dark.
40:53No.
40:54See you later.
40:54Thank you very much.
40:55Cheers.
41:00The hair dye has come at a big moment for Claire,
41:05as the parole panel are about to let her know
41:08if she'll be free to leave Belmarsh.
41:12The panel is satisfied that it's no longer necessary for the pretension of the public
41:17that you be confined and therefore direct your release
41:20as per the proposed risk management plan and licence conditions.
41:26Oh, shit.
41:29I can go smoke a bloody cigarette.
41:31I can...
41:32Oh, my God.
41:34It is amazing.
41:36But Claire has no friends, home or family to move in with.
41:41Nearly a third of the UK's jail leavers are homeless
41:44and some commit crimes just to go back into prison and get a bed for the night.
41:50Claire wants to stay in a female hostel
41:53and it's the job of Belmarsh and probation to find one that will take her.
41:58They're going to be effectively judging me on if they think I'm woman enough.
42:05It is, um, it's a little bit nerve-wracking, you know, not knowing what's going to happen.
42:16For a lot of prisoners, leaving Belmarsh can be as big a moment as arriving.
42:23For some, it's a chance to celebrate.
42:27The first two things I'm going to do, yeah?
42:29What's the first thing you're going to do?
42:30The first thing straight away, McDonald's.
42:32McDonald's?
42:32The second thing is that I'm going to have a proper cigarette.
42:35For others, it's a transfer to another institution.
42:38I've got a drink.
42:40While for many, it's the hope of a fresh start.
42:43Where am I signing?
42:45B.I. into a bloody cell.
42:47There's a hotel, you get zero stars.
42:52For some, it means stepping into the unknown.
42:57So, after four years of being in Belmarsh, Claire is finally being released.
43:06Hi.
43:07Can we come in?
43:10Do you have any idea where you're going to sleep tonight?
43:13No. No. No idea.
43:16That's all I'm asking for. Four walls and a roof.
43:19I feel let down by the system, actually.
43:23The female hostels have rejected Claire for being too male.
43:27And the male hostels for being too female.
43:31But she has to leave today.
43:34You are very nice.
43:36Say, Denise and Claire.
43:37All right.
43:39Cheer up, Claire. Thank you. See you.
43:42I wish her well, but she completely doesn't know where she's going.
43:46She's not going to a safe refuge as Belmarsh is.
43:50So, she might have a lot of issues once she leaves here.
43:56Oh, all right.
43:57Do you please notice your last few bits?
43:59Yeah.
43:59You'll get your cash, valuable ones.
44:02Right.
44:02We're also giving you a travel warrant to get to where you've got to go soon.
44:04OK, thank you. Good luck.
44:06Do you think that life might be easier for you in here than on the outside?
44:15Yes, in as much as I've got a place to sleep.
44:21Have a good day, guys.
44:21Cheers, mate. Cheers.
44:25I'll be starting from the ground upwards, which is daunting.
44:33But also, I've got a chance to try and make something for my life.
44:44If you will survive Belmarsh as a 20-gender person, you're pretty much prepared for most things.
44:49But for Belmarsh's 900 inmates, life inside goes on.
44:59For me, the last six months has confirmed Belmarsh's reputation as one of Britain's most notorious prisons.
45:06But its high levels of security and the fact it will take inmates that no other prison can or will
45:11take makes it unique.
45:14I've also seen the other side of this prison that deals with vulnerable prisoners with complex health needs.
45:20But there are no easy journeys here for staff or for inmates and anyone to become a victim here at
45:28any point.
45:28And while society remains so troubled and so violent, we will continue to rely on places like Belmarsh to deal
45:37with Britain's most demanding and dangerous prisoners.
46:04Geordie and Will investigate a deadly hit-and-run case and uncover a web of lies and betrayal when the
46:09new series of Grantchester continues here on ITV.
46:12Tomorrow night at 9.
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