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Welcome To HMP Belmarsh With Ross Kemp S01E01
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00:01Michael Adabalajou is being held on suspicion of the murder of Fusalia Lee Rigby.
00:06Huntley's now being held in complete isolation. The risk of his being attacked means...
00:11Near the River Thames in south-east London lies Britain's most infamous high-security prison.
00:17The former London black cab driver has been moved to a cell at Belmarsh High Security Prison.
00:23For nearly 30 years, it's locked up the country's most dangerous contact.
00:27He was arrested and taken to Belmarsh.
00:29From the great train robber Ronnie Biggs to Ian Huntley and the Islamic extremist Anjim Chowdhury.
00:37But what happens here has remained virtually unknown.
00:41Cameras have never been granted full access to this jail until now.
00:47I'll be spending six months inside these walls.
00:51Right, I offered you your boot.
00:54Where extremists and crime lords...
00:56Bobby Robinson's been sentenced to nine weeks.
00:59You called for a demonstration. Why did you do that?
01:02Live alongside common criminals.
01:05Got put in jail for a crime that I've committed. Got to do my time, innit?
01:09There's not one prisoner in the country that we won't take.
01:11RC staff try to cope with its volatile mix of inmates.
01:16Get out my...
01:17When it goes wrong, it can go very well.
01:22And witness the realities that prisoners face.
01:25Obviously, there's a lot of violence.
01:28Just don't be involved in the shit.
01:31This is hellmarsh.
01:32Oh my God, I'm the odd one out here.
01:35This is life behind the doors...
01:37I feel like this is the end of the world.
01:40...of the UK's most notorious jail.
01:43There's a hotel, we get zero stars.
01:46Please release me, let me go.
01:50Welcome to Belmarsh.
02:09Hello, P&T Ordering Officer here.
02:11This afternoon, can I have one of you to go to the HSU, please?
02:16Custodial manager Jamie Scammell is in charge of staff operations in Belmarsh today.
02:22And it could be an important shift for him and the prison.
02:35Tommy Robinson's duty to be sentenced to the Old Bailey this morning.
02:38And obviously, being an Old Bailey prisoner, he will come to us.
02:41I'm not actually meant to be watching telly on duty at all.
02:43But obviously, with today's events, it's nice to be sort of forewarned.
02:47We'll bring you these sentences so as we know what it is.
02:50Robinson's crime was filming defendants at court and broadcasting it on social media.
02:56It's just a waiting game now, really.
02:57As soon as we get the verdict on TV, I'll speak to the duty governor
03:01and we'll just get the ball rolling as to how we're going to manage him when he arrives.
03:04He will be arriving at Belmarsh if he's convicted.
03:08Half an hour later, and the sentence is in.
03:11He's sentenced to nine weeks in prison for a contempt of court.
03:15Tommy Robinson is the most high-profile right-wing supporter in the country right now.
03:20And he's just become Belmarsh's problem.
03:23Three days ago, he said he feared jail.
03:25He feared that it was a death sentence, as he put it.
03:28Obviously, we've got a very diverse community of prisoners.
03:30I believe on Friday, we have up to 230 prisoners going to Muslim prayer,
03:35so there's quite a high number.
03:37There's obviously going to be prisoners that will be offended by his views.
03:40That's not going to be an ideal environment.
03:42Word that Tommy Robinson is coming is already out on the prison house blocks.
03:48Tommy Robinson?
03:52Oh, I bet you the shit has hit the family for him.
03:55He's in trouble, he is.
03:57People like the Muslims and ethnic minorities aren't going to like him too much.
04:02He needs to get what my man got on there.
04:04One down the side.
04:05That's what he needs.
04:07Get him soon, trust me.
04:09This inmate is referring to a slashing last month in Belmarsh.
04:13The aftermath was caught on an officer's body cam.
04:21The victim was a known right-wing supporter said to have defaced the Koran.
04:28He had his face cut with a razor blade
04:32and boiling water and sugar thrown over his back.
04:36What about your legs?
04:37You're not holding the way around your legs.
04:40Within an hour until Robinson arrives,
04:43Belmarsh's governor Rob Davis and deputy Jenny Louie
04:46caught an emergency meeting with senior staff.
04:50Thank you everyone for coming here.
04:53Obviously we're going to discuss location
04:55and we've got to consider his safety, other safety and staff safety.
04:59So our options are,
05:00we can put him in the segregation, not under punishment,
05:03put a TV in there.
05:04We can look at healthcare
05:06or we can put him on normal location.
05:08I think that's probably the worst option we've got.
05:11Segregation, we have got a space,
05:13but I think we have got quite a few Muslim prisoners down the sea.
05:17Quite a volatile invoke at the moment,
05:19we have another prisoner who's been targeted upon Muslim prisoners before,
05:22so I don't know if he'll get the same treatment down there.
05:24I would say that that's probably not our option.
05:27So the contingency suite,
05:28which we could open up and put him in there,
05:31has got the facilities,
05:32we can offer a bit of a regime.
05:35We've got nothing else,
05:36so I think we're all erring on the contingency suite.
05:42Belmarsh has the only contingency suite in the country,
05:46designed to hold high-profile prisoners
05:49deemed at risk of suicide or attacked by other inmates.
05:53So this is helping Ian Huntley, Mr. Warboys,
05:57and Jim Trow before he's released,
05:59so that kind of person that we can't keep from anyone else.
06:02It doesn't get used very often.
06:03This is very rare that this will be opened.
06:08So you just really just make sure
06:09it's ready for someone to be located here.
06:13The windows are sealed as well,
06:14so you can't get round the bars.
06:16There's no shower facilities.
06:18Again, it's not about the individual,
06:20it's about what we need to do to keep prisoners,
06:22and obviously the person down here safe.
06:26Or to keep them from having access to people
06:29that they might be able to influence in some way.
06:33And then you've obviously got the exercise yard,
06:36which is self-contained.
06:37Not very nice, but, yeah.
06:40Can you just give this quick clean-out for us?
06:42Yeah.
06:43What could happen?
06:44Hi, mate, it's Chris here at Belmarsh.
06:46Can you get an update on that van from the old baby
06:49with young Robinson on, please?
06:52Tommy Robinson's real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon.
06:57He may be infamous,
06:59but he will be processed through reception
07:01like any other prisoner.
07:05Stand on that line for me.
07:07Full name?
07:08Stephen Yaxley-Lennon.
07:09Do you consider yourself to be white and British?
07:11What do?
07:12Or 100 and I, just won't.
07:14I'm just going to get your cookie-webbed in.
07:16There will be people in this prison right now
07:19who would really like to get to him.
07:23They'd like to meet with him, I'm sure they would, yes.
07:25But not to have a cup of tea?
07:27Probably not, no.
07:29Let me from 7-1.
07:30Could we inform the staff that we continue?
07:32Robinson will be moved to the contingency suite
07:35under special escort
07:37to avoid contact with any other prisoner.
07:43Arranging his arrival has taken up hours
07:45for both senior staff and officers.
07:49That's your one, mate.
07:49Just jump in there for a minute.
07:52Obviously, this is where you'll be for now.
07:54Like every prisoner, he's screened by a nurse.
07:58This is the one place in Belmarsh
08:00where no other prisoners can get to Robinson.
08:03But he's not happy.
08:06They bring it in to myself.
08:08The prisoners who are preparing the food,
08:10they will know that's specifically my meal.
08:20Tommy Robinson will be isolated here
08:23for the next nine weeks.
08:25Like every inmate, he'll be allowed two visits a month.
08:28But he'll also have daily access to his own payphone,
08:31which means he can be in regular contact with his family
08:34and his network of supporters outside.
08:38Now, they're saying he'll be treated like any other prisoner.
08:48Belmarsh serves England and Wales Central Criminal Court, the Old Bailey,
08:53meaning its prisoners put it in the media spotlight
08:57more than any other UK jail.
08:59It's held convicts like black cab rapist John Warboys,
09:04hate preacher Abu Hamza,
09:06and today arguably the most controversial prisoner in the world,
09:10Julian Assange.
09:12Let us resist!
09:14You can resist!
09:15We will take anyone.
09:17We've had war criminals.
09:18We've had prisoners in here for genocide.
09:20There's not one prisoner in the country that we won't take.
09:23We've got 17 convicted terrorists,
09:27187 murderers,
09:28prisoners that have killed three or four people.
09:39This ain't a nice place to be, I tell you.
09:41This ain't Belmarsh, this is Elmarsh.
09:43As if this wasn't enough,
09:45Belmarsh also acts as a normal prison
09:47and has to manage inmates from its catchment area in south-east London,
09:52many of whom have a history of violence.
09:55Right, hands on your head.
09:56Prisoners that have assaulted 40, 50 staff and prisoners.
09:59Yeah, piece of shit, you know that.
10:02120 officers must oversee 900 inmates across four houseblocks.
10:08The sharp rise in UK gang crime is reflected in here too,
10:13creating serious containment issues for the prison.
10:17We've got 68 known street gangs, 148 members,
10:22some very violent individuals.
10:30The volatile mix of people we've got here is second to none.
10:34So every day we're juggling, trying our best to keep the roof on.
10:41Every effort is made to separate rival gang members on the houseblocks.
10:48But in reception, where prisoners come and go every day,
10:52it can be virtually impossible to keep them apart.
10:56Excellent.
10:56Your date of birth?
10:57What's your prison number?
10:59Sorry.
11:00Do you know what court are you going to serve?
11:01Yeah.
11:02I'll do you.
11:03Love it.
11:03You're going into a single cell phone now, OK?
11:05He is a conflict-wise, he's got conflicts with absolutely everyone.
11:08This is the conflict list, and these are all prisoners that have got conflict with one another.
11:12They're from every single houseblock, one, two, three, and four.
11:15So it's very, very difficult to move these prisoners around the jail.
11:17It's all gang-related from outside prior to them coming into custody
11:21or someone that they've got conflict with on another houseblock.
11:24Example here, historical conflict from outside,
11:28assaults, assaults, fighting, fighting, historical conflict.
11:30The level of violence is increasing.
11:32It's just causing concern.
11:33Staff safety is obviously at risk.
11:35Prisoner safety is at risk as well.
11:37It does have a potential to go wrong.
11:39We're in a very volatile area at times,
11:41but these conflicts come out of nowhere.
11:44And when it goes wrong, it can go very wrong.
11:46High-profile prisoners.
11:48Stop!
11:56There's a fight just starting.
12:01Let's take that game close, please.
12:03He went to try and come out, didn't come out.
12:05There's just so many conflicts.
12:10Even them two, they need movement now.
12:12Get him in a single cell.
12:13Come in with me in a single cell.
12:14Tell him I'll pull these two down in the cell.
12:16Two co-defendants have tried to attack another prisoner
12:18as the holding room door's been open.
12:20It's now been dealt with.
12:21But again, it's just another conflict issue
12:22that we've now got to deal with
12:23to manage those people appropriately.
12:25They get that one chance to meet each other
12:28and fight and do what they need to do.
12:30So it is obviously a bit of a pressure cooker down there at times.
12:31And the pressure on Belmarsh is set to rise even further.
12:37Before coming to jail,
12:39Tommy Robinson called for a protest against his incarceration.
12:43Now, his right-hand man has posted
12:46a seemingly threatening clip on social media.
12:50Tommy told me specifically
12:52he wanted people outside that jail on the Saturday.
12:54OK?
12:55So that's what's going to happen.
12:57I think it's about time we step our game up a little bit.
12:59We need to be extremely, extremely disruptive.
13:15When it opened in 1991,
13:18HMP Belmarsh was the first male prison
13:21to be built in London for over 100 years.
13:25A new breed of supermax jail,
13:28it was designed to take criminals
13:30considered a threat to national security,
13:32including IRA terrorists.
13:36It has its own guard dog unit
13:38and a bomb-proof tunnel linking it to Woodwich Crown Court.
13:42But one place truly sets Belmarsh apart from other jails.
13:47I'm on my way into the most infamous part of Belmarsh,
13:51the HSU or high security unit.
13:54It houses some of the most dangerous prisoners in Britain.
13:58Now, no film crew has ever been granted access to it before.
14:04But I'm on my way in there now.
14:10With its own 20-foot-high concrete wall
14:13and with doors open remotely by central control,
14:18this is the only prison within a prison in England and Wales.
14:26Another gate.
14:28There is. Hello.
14:29Hello, I'm Ross.
14:30Nice to meet you.
14:31Hi, Helen.
14:32Helen Bicker is governor here.
14:34Come on through.
14:35So this is the HSU.
14:38Right now, there are seven prisoners held here.
14:44Many are too much of a security risk to film.
14:47What kind of inmates do you have presently in here?
14:51What kind of offences are they committing?
14:52We have prisoners in here who are organised crime,
14:55prisoners who've committed terrorist offences,
14:57prisoners who've committed offences regarding drugs
15:00with lots of money involved,
15:02which means that they have the money and the connections
15:05if they wanted to escape.
15:07Previous occupants have included Charles Bronson,
15:11KGB agents and Al-Qaeda terrorists.
15:15No-one has ever been allowed to interview an HSU prisoner.
15:20Until now.
15:23This is Mohammed Hafiz.
15:28Whilst he might look unassuming,
15:30he is in fact the alleged mastermind
15:32of a global drug smuggling empire.
15:36A millionaire with contacts around the world,
15:39he's now one of the highest escape risks in the country.
15:44The HSU is a long way from his former life,
15:49watching polo and rubbing shoulders with royalty.
15:53And the power Hafiz wielded
15:55is clear from the name he was given by his associates.
15:59Do you know that you have a nickname?
16:02Sultan.
16:02Sultan, yeah. Where does that come from?
16:04Our family are the number one gold and silver dealer
16:07in Dubai last 40 years.
16:09We have sold 2.5 billion worth of gold and silver
16:12for them in Dubai.
16:13So you don't think that you should be
16:15in the high security unit of Belmont?
16:17No, no. I shouldn't be in the prison.
16:18Why?
16:19I've never been to any jail in my life, sir.
16:21I'm a 62-year-old man.
16:23Hafiz is facing extradition to the US
16:26where he could serve up to 30 years in prison if convicted.
16:30But whilst here,
16:31all inmates are given the chance of rehabilitation,
16:35a garden where they can learn to grow
16:37their own legal crops.
16:40We grow strawberries here.
16:42It's so plenty.
16:43It goes to waste.
16:44Really?
16:45There's so much of it.
16:46This year, maybe two, three tons of strawberry came down.
16:49If you can get hooked with the Tesco,
16:51we can supply them from here.
16:53But I'm not sure anything,
16:55let alone fruit,
16:56could get out of this place,
16:57given its 96 cameras,
16:59reams of razor wire
17:01and three layers of steel mesh for a roof.
17:07It even has its own segregation unit.
17:11And deep within that
17:12lies a place few know exists.
17:15And even fewer have been inside.
17:18More security.
17:19This isn't used very often,
17:21but we have two special cells in here.
17:25My own personal view is
17:27I feel like this is the end of the world.
17:30This is what's known as the box.
17:33It once held one of Lee Rigby's killers.
17:37Once you're here,
17:38things have got really bad.
17:40This is as low as you can go.
17:41I think this is a really difficult place to be, yeah.
17:46Oh, no bed.
17:51No bed.
17:53No toilet.
17:54No sinks and no access to water.
17:57Could you close me in here
17:58and just see what it's like?
17:59Yeah, sure.
18:06HSU feels oppressive to begin with.
18:09But this has magnified it
18:14a hundred times.
18:15It's definitely that feeling
18:17that you are completely alone.
18:21I don't think I could do an hour in here
18:23without going around the twist.
18:36Beyond the jail within a jail,
18:38Belmage functions as a normal prison.
18:40Inmates here can be unlocked for up to four hours a day
18:45to socialise, attend workshops, college and a gym.
18:52Charlie Pope is a Belmage regular
18:55who knows this place like his own backyard.
18:59This is one of the officers at the end here
19:00that I've known for a long time.
19:04It's a long, long time.
19:07It's happening, gov.
19:09All right?
19:10Yeah.
19:11Charlie's been here nearly a dozen times.
19:14He's now serving 19 months for burglary.
19:17Got put in jail for a crime that I committed.
19:20You know, so obviously I'm here.
19:22Got to do my time, innit?
19:25You'll hug one, boys.
19:27Charlie's 32 and lucky enough
19:30to have the full support of his family,
19:32including two of his brothers
19:34who are also doing time in Belmage.
19:36We're the Pope Brothers.
19:37From Woolwich, South East 18.
19:40Obviously, my name's Louis.
19:41S-E-1-A.
19:42My name's Charlie.
19:43And I'm Harvey.
19:44Everyone knows who we are.
19:46Yeah, yeah.
19:46This is the Pope's home from home?
19:48Yes.
19:48He is home from home.
19:49They come back in, greet us all, yeah.
19:52This is our local.
19:53Yeah, this is our local.
19:54This is the spot.
19:54They're characters, bro.
19:55They are characters.
19:57It's always worth having been here anyway,
19:58you know what I mean?
19:59Me and my older brother,
20:00we was here with my dad as well.
20:03Yeah, we was here with my dad and that, yeah.
20:04It's probably more that we haven't found yet
20:06or not turned 18 yet.
20:08You see the same faces
20:09every time you come back to prison.
20:11It's the same faces.
20:12It never changes.
20:13Between them, the Popes reckon
20:15they've spent nearly 20 years in Belmar.
20:17Spend two straight down
20:18if you're going out, please.
20:20Move!
20:21I've been in and out of jail
20:23since I was a kid.
20:25Been involved in my drugs,
20:27you know,
20:27just basically a criminal.
20:29All my money that I live by
20:30is funded by crime.
20:33What, all your money
20:34and what you live by
20:35is funded by crime?
20:36Come on, don't say shit like that, bro.
20:38It is.
20:38No, it's not.
20:39What, what do you mean in jail, bro?
20:39Well, you get benefits.
20:41I'll get benefits.
20:41Well then, so don't talk shit.
20:42Not all your money,
20:44not all your money
20:44is funded by crime, ain't it?
20:46My family are really,
20:47really important to me,
20:48you know, really important.
20:50Try to wrap it up, man.
20:51Anyway, we need to go to come.
20:52You've got things to do,
20:53people to see.
20:54It'll only take for one of us
20:56to change
20:57for all of us to do the same
20:58because we all follow each other.
21:01All of us follow each other.
21:03Over half of Britain's criminals
21:05re-offend within a year of release
21:07and Belmarsh is desperate to find ways
21:10to stop inmates coming back.
21:13After much competition,
21:15Charlie has won a place
21:16on a potentially life-changing project
21:19where inmates pitch business ideas
21:21to a panel,
21:23Dragon's Den style.
21:25The winner gets £500 on release
21:28to help them start up.
21:30This is the room
21:31we're going to be going to,
21:32the workshop room
21:33where we're going to be doing
21:34our work this afternoon.
21:35I'm here to obviously
21:36try and do something with myself
21:37because I ain't going to lie,
21:38I keep coming back to prison
21:39and without me doing something
21:41because it's going to be
21:42the same story every now and day,
21:44you know, so,
21:45you know, this is it, ain't it?
21:46What else can I do
21:47apart from try?
21:52You want to do something
21:53that will transform you.
21:55This is the Enterprise Exchange
21:57run by course creator
21:59Phil Ashford.
22:01People in prison
22:02are naturally entrepreneurial
22:03so you link those two things together,
22:06give them the skills.
22:08We've had people starting restaurants,
22:09we've had people now
22:10employing 10, 15 people
22:12but it's more than that,
22:13it's about building the confidence
22:14and building the man.
22:16Welcome.
22:17Yeah, my name's Charlie.
22:20I've only just thought about
22:22what I wanted to say last night.
22:25A gardening company
22:26for ex-prisoners
22:29and people that have just come off
22:31of hard drugs
22:32to give them something to do
22:33to work in partnership
22:35with local councils
22:36for the elderly
22:37and people that have mental illness.
22:38That's fantastic.
22:40Brilliant.
22:41There ain't never been
22:42a programme like this
22:43that's been brought into a prison
22:44that I've been in before.
22:46People on the wing that I know
22:47have even said to me,
22:50Charlie, you know,
22:50if you were to get this,
22:51I would be one of your employees.
22:54I've had many people say it.
22:55I grew up in a family
22:57with just drugs
22:59so it would be a big change
23:02for me, wouldn't it?
23:03Like, obviously a big, big change.
23:06I believe it's a really good idea.
23:08Plus, I've got a really,
23:09really intelligent head, yeah,
23:11and I'm really good with my hands,
23:12you know.
23:13If I put my head to it,
23:14I know I can do it.
23:15I know I can do it.
23:18Whatever your thoughts
23:19on rehabilitation,
23:20it's clear that courses like this
23:22can help bring hope
23:23and harmony to Belmarsh.
23:26But elsewhere,
23:28jail life can be disrupted
23:29at any time
23:30by forces outside
23:32the prison's control.
23:35Any demonstration
23:36that happens outside the prison
23:38put my staff at risk.
23:40The staff have to come in on duty,
23:41they have to leave.
23:43That's not just uniform staff,
23:44that's admin staff,
23:45and they will have to go through
23:47any demonstration.
23:48Some of these supporters
23:49have got very extreme views.
23:52They have shown violence.
23:55Some 200 Tommy Robinson supporters
23:57are heading for the gates
23:59of Belmarsh.
24:00I'm reluctant to give a platform
24:02to anyone with extreme views,
24:04but I have to ask Robinson himself
24:07why he's called the demo.
24:11Thank you, sir.
24:12How are you doing?
24:13Good.
24:14Can I sit down?
24:15Yeah, I'm going.
24:16You put out a call
24:18on social media
24:20for people to demonstrate today
24:21outside the prison.
24:22Why did you call it?
24:24Essentially,
24:25I wanted to make sure
24:26that I had my rights.
24:27I know what 10 weeks
24:28of solitary confinement does.
24:29It's not good for them.
24:30It's not solitary confinement
24:31as in terms of the cooler.
24:33It's not a box
24:34with nothing in it.
24:35You've got a TV,
24:36you've got a kettle.
24:37But also,
24:37do you not think
24:38by calling a demonstration
24:39that could possibly end in violence,
24:42that that's helping your cause?
24:44It sends a message
24:45to the establishment
24:46that this doesn't work.
24:48What do you think
24:48the other inmates
24:49are going to feel
24:50about you?
24:51If they can hear
24:51people screaming
24:52for you to be
24:53either let out
24:54or freed,
24:55do you not think
24:56that's going to provoke
24:57some of the inmates?
24:59I mean,
24:59that's a concern
25:00the prison has.
25:01You know,
25:01staff that would have
25:02been off on a weekend
25:03are now working.
25:04What do you think
25:05it's going to do?
25:05What they usually hear
25:06is,
25:07there's some sound
25:08about Islam.
25:09Sorry.
25:11Do you hear the dogs?
25:12The dogs are getting excited.
25:14You know,
25:15you said there was
25:15a price on your head.
25:16Do you not think
25:17that price will go up
25:18as a result
25:20with this demonstration?
25:21No, no.
25:22Unless I tell them
25:23to play a cartoon
25:23of Mohammed outside.
25:25Which I may do
25:26if things go worse.
25:28Comments like this
25:29don't just cause offence.
25:32They can stir up trouble too.
25:40Last year,
25:41Robinson supporters
25:43injured over 20 police officers
25:45in a demo.
25:46The prison fears
25:47that protesters
25:48could not only turn violent,
25:50but even storm the gate.
25:52We want to try me out!
25:54We want to try me out!
25:55We want to try me out!
25:58We want to try me out!
26:00We want to try me out!
26:01We want to try me out!
26:01The prison
26:02has now gone into
26:04command mode.
26:05Which effectively means
26:07that the prison
26:07freezes itself.
26:09There's an officer,
26:10if you're with inmates
26:10or not with inmates,
26:11you basically stand
26:12in that position.
26:13The front door's locked
26:14and all decisions
26:16inside the prison
26:17all go through
26:18the command suite.
26:21Good afternoon.
26:23Good evening.
26:24What's the situation, gentlemen?
26:25Last group of protesters
26:26there,
26:27they've been letting off
26:29pyrotechnics
26:29and smoke bombs.
26:31And they have threatened
26:33two members of staff
26:33coming in on duty.
26:35Swearing ammo and using
26:36that guy in the white
26:38to choose one of those
26:39can't move in.
26:40At the moment,
26:41there is actually
26:42a scuffle between
26:43the protesters.
26:45Which potentially
26:46could be that
26:47some people
26:47want to escalate it.
26:52I've come to
26:53the department
26:54closest to the demo,
26:55the healthcare unit,
26:57home to
26:58Belmarsh's
26:58most vulnerable
26:59inmates.
27:02I think I'm
27:04going to start now.
27:05Cool!
27:05I don't know.
27:07Tommy's room,
27:08I don't know!
27:08What for?
27:10It's winding people
27:11up, isn't it?
27:11EGL fucking
27:12racist!
27:15EGL motherfuckers!
27:16I say this on camera
27:17and fuck them, man!
27:19You know what I mean?
27:19This world should be
27:20peaceful,
27:21no racist priests!
27:22But can you see
27:23what it says there?
27:24Where?
27:24You see what it says?
27:25English Defence League.
27:26Nah, I didn't write that.
27:28I guess not.
27:29Why are you
27:30angry by the
27:30presence?
27:31Why?
27:31I'm angry!
27:32I don't like racism!
27:33This is the 21st century!
27:35This is going to be
27:36on lockdown,
27:36everybody's going to be
27:37still locked down.
27:38Is that going to make
27:39you more popular?
27:40Or less popular?
27:40Yeah, less popular!
27:43The demo is now
27:45in danger of inciting
27:46violence inside
27:48and setting prisoner
27:50against prisoner.
28:02Despite their best
28:03efforts to cause
28:04disruption,
28:05Tommy Robinson's
28:06supporters were
28:07eventually cleared
28:08by police
28:09and a moment
28:10of relative calm
28:11descends on
28:12Belmarsh.
28:13For now.
28:19But there's one group
28:21of inmates here
28:22who are a constant
28:23threat to the very
28:24stability of this jail.
28:28Gangs.
28:30With nearly 150 gang
28:33members,
28:33many of them
28:34fierce rivals,
28:35all jam-packed
28:36within these walls,
28:38fights break out
28:39here every day,
28:41sometimes in the
28:42once sacrosanct
28:44family visits hall.
28:50Whilst controlling
28:51gangs means
28:52separating them
28:53on the house blocks,
28:54Belmarsh is pioneering
28:56a unique course
28:57that radically
28:58puts them together
28:59in the same room.
29:01I come from the same
29:02communities you guys
29:04have grown up in,
29:05you know what I mean?
29:05So I was living the
29:06life a lot of guys
29:07are striving for
29:08that's on the streets,
29:09getting money,
29:10but I was not happy.
29:12Michael Bell grew
29:13up around street gangs.
29:15What's the perks
29:15of this lifestyle?
29:16Drugs,
29:17just easy money,
29:18easy,
29:19fast money.
29:20I don't want to be
29:20broke,
29:21I don't want to come
29:21home and have no TV.
29:23For the last three
29:24years,
29:24he and the charity
29:25Change Grow Live
29:26have been getting
29:27gang members,
29:28some serving 25 years
29:30for violent crimes
29:32to open up about
29:33what led them
29:34to be in Belmarsh.
29:35I don't necessarily
29:36want to sell drugs,
29:37I might have to
29:37just to get by.
29:39He was caught in a rap,
29:40he didn't know
29:40no better for him.
29:41Now, if you didn't
29:42slow down and seen
29:44everything was
29:44going on around you,
29:45you might not be
29:46in the situation
29:46you are today with.
29:47Many here
29:48never finish school
29:50and this two-week course
29:51could be the first
29:52positive official recognition
29:54they've ever achieved.
29:55It's about what you're
29:56going to do when you
29:57go home,
29:57how can you better
29:58yourself and then
29:59better the people
30:00around you.
30:00These are individuals
30:02who are dangerous.
30:04We're talking about
30:04gun crime,
30:06knife crime,
30:06offences that have
30:07taken people's lives.
30:09There's a number of
30:09people who wouldn't
30:10want to even be
30:11in their company.
30:12I'm not saying
30:13that this is a miracle
30:14because it's not.
30:15But break down
30:15those barriers
30:16and you get to know
30:17who they are.
30:18They want to change.
30:24someone else hoping to
30:26change is Charlie Pope.
30:29You're going to need
30:29someone to help
30:29do your admin
30:30that's going to grow
30:31the business,
30:32get new business in
30:33and all that.
30:33He's back on the
30:34prison business initiative
30:36and has just two weeks
30:37until pitch day.
30:38Okay guys,
30:40I'd just like you to
30:41share some of your
30:42visions.
30:43So I'm going to start
30:44with this table over here.
30:45The main customer
30:46will be the elderly,
30:48people with mental health
30:50problems and anyone
30:51else who needs
30:52extra help keeping
30:54their garden a paradise.
30:56Lovely.
30:57Fantastic.
30:58Well done Charlie.
30:59Without knowing it
31:00you've just done the
31:01start of your sales pitch.
31:06Meanwhile Charlie's
31:07brother Avi
31:08is busy pursuing
31:09his own far
31:10riskier business deals
31:12on house block three.
31:14But listen boys,
31:15where are we going
31:15to get some spice from?
31:17Who are we going
31:18to go and see?
31:19We're going to fly
31:19straight into him.
31:20What are you getting
31:20tennis bit?
31:21Get a couple of joints
31:22in boys,
31:23might as well.
31:24I've seen people
31:25get cut open in here
31:26and left with like
31:2765 stitches down their
31:28face from one side
31:29to another.
31:30Naughty.
31:31It's all over spice.
31:32All over spice.
31:34Spice is the worst
31:35drug.
31:36But when you're in
31:37here it's the best
31:37drug.
31:37It's not good man.
31:38I do want to stop
31:39the drug but it's
31:39hard isn't it?
31:40When you're in a
31:41variety where everyone
31:43uses, you're right
31:44mate, where are you
31:44going?
31:45Just getting a score.
31:46You want to come
31:46with me?
31:47Much of the violence
31:48across prisons today
31:50is down to spice.
31:52And despite being a
31:53high security prison,
31:54not even Belmarsh
31:56can stop it getting
31:57in.
32:03known as the
32:05zombie drug,
32:05this powerful
32:06synthetic cannabis
32:08can cause
32:09hallucinations,
32:10heart attacks
32:12and violent psychotic
32:14behaviour.
32:16Don't look good
32:18does he?
32:19We've got a nurse.
32:20Yeah,
32:20we've got a nurse.
32:21What's the name?
32:23So, it's a regular
32:24vape.
32:24A bit of light or something
32:25in here.
32:26Smells a burnt paper.
32:28Don't know it too much.
32:29Seriously.
32:30I can actually feel
32:31that.
32:31No, I know.
32:32And I can feel it.
32:33It's not putting
32:33money in it.
32:34You barely touched it
32:35though, did you?
32:36You barely even took it.
32:37No, it went like that.
32:37And literally I can feel
32:38that.
32:39Yeah, I know.
32:43Yeah.
32:44Yeah, it's just like
32:44there you go.
32:48Couldn't it?
32:48She's been there.
32:50It's shocking to think
32:51that a tiny piece of paper
32:53can have such a
32:55disruptive effect
32:56both on people's health
32:57and prison life.
33:00To help stop drugs
33:01coming in,
33:02every single piece
33:03of mail has to be
33:05checked.
33:05With the help
33:07of a £35,000
33:08piece of kit.
33:10In terms of being
33:11able to detect drugs
33:12on the paper,
33:13it's amazing.
33:15This is the swabs
33:16we use.
33:17That bit there.
33:19It is so important
33:20to us to reduce
33:21the drug level
33:22in prison.
33:23I'm just going
33:24on.
33:29So it's contaminated
33:30with cocaine.
33:31And that happens
33:32with every single
33:32letter?
33:33Yes.
33:34100%.
33:34If drugs are found,
33:36the letters are seized.
33:39All inmates' posts
33:40must be checked
33:41for material that's
33:42inappropriate
33:43or a security risk.
33:45And that includes
33:46fan mail.
33:47That's Mr. Assange's
33:49mail there.
33:49For how long?
33:50That's just this
33:51last week.
33:52That's a week's
33:53mail there.
33:53I have taken
33:54two pounds up
33:54to him already.
33:56He's getting a lot
33:56of mail.
33:57And whose is this
33:58over here?
33:58That's Mr. Robinson's.
34:01That's Mr. Robinson's?
34:03It's a lot.
34:05It's a lot.
34:06Compare that
34:06to what our guys
34:07in other parts
34:08of the prison
34:08receive.
34:09For like two
34:10days.
34:10This is
34:11house pot one?
34:13Yes.
34:13So this is all
34:14the mail
34:14for 200 prisoners.
34:16And that's the mail
34:17for Tommy Robinson.
34:18Tommy Robinson.
34:19But all of it
34:20has to be vetted.
34:21Everything's read.
34:22So this will be
34:23what our staff
34:23need to be aware of.
34:24They're all right-wing
34:26organisations
34:26or militias.
34:28Mm-hmm.
34:28I don't know
34:29what in terms
34:30of logos
34:31but we have
34:32a team who do.
34:33How much
34:34resource
34:34is this taking away?
34:36They take down
34:37bags a day
34:38down to him.
34:39So they're putting
34:39a lot of pressure
34:40on the staff
34:41to satisfy ourselves
34:42that there's nothing
34:43within that mail
34:44of concern
34:45and we can get
34:46it to him
34:46as soon as possible
34:47but you can see
34:48the volume is huge.
34:51So far
34:52Belmarsh has kept
34:53Tommy Robinson
34:54safe, sound
34:56and deprived
34:57of publicity
34:59but that's
34:59just changed.
35:01Tommy Robinson
35:02was punched
35:03in prison shower
35:04by a man
35:05aged 70.
35:07I know how you've been.
35:09I was only seeing
35:09him a couple of years ago
35:10and I said
35:10he's not going to last
35:12long.
35:13One of the prison
35:14officers asked
35:15what's going on
35:16but he said
35:16he had slipped
35:17and no official
35:18report was made.
35:20I imagine we
35:21would have heard
35:22about it.
35:23I'm surprised
35:23we never heard
35:24about it.
35:25That's because
35:25the story's not
35:26true.
35:27I'm going to have
35:28to talk to you
35:28about papers
35:29over the weekend.
35:31You've been beaten
35:31up by a 70-year-old.
35:32No.
35:33I thought
35:33the better of you.
35:34Yeah, I know.
35:35Okay, but
35:37it's not straight to me.
35:39Come see it.
35:41It's on that.
35:42IP beats up Tommy.
35:43Oh, mate,
35:44look at that line.
35:45If you act
35:46like you're the boss
35:47in here
35:47they will take you down.
35:49What the fuck?
35:50It's a 70-year-old
35:51that took you down.
35:53I haven't seen
35:53another inmate.
35:54I haven't visually
35:55looked at anyone.
35:56Right, well,
35:56it's put my staff
35:57at risk
35:57and there could be
35:58retribution
35:59in the wings
35:59where people are
36:00thinking if that's
36:01happening
36:01we're going to get
36:02a bit back
36:02tip for tap
36:03which is not
36:05good for me.
36:05Just as much
36:06as you can
36:06when you speak
36:07to people.
36:07I've told everyone
36:08I'm sure I've got
36:09my first visit
36:10tomorrow from
36:10a friend
36:11who will tell
36:13people.
36:14Thank you very much.
36:16You're welcome.
36:20Keeping Tommy
36:21Robinson alone
36:22means Belmarsh
36:23can control
36:24what happens
36:25to him
36:25inside.
36:30But elsewhere
36:31prisoners
36:31gather
36:32prisoners gather
36:32every day
36:33to exercise
36:33and socialize.
36:36Just four members
36:38of staff
36:38rely on the
36:39goodwill
36:40of over 100
36:41prisoners
36:41to keep the peace.
36:44But with so many
36:45inmates in one place
36:47there's always a chance
36:49things can kick off.
36:52It's morning exercise
36:54on one of the house
36:55block yards
36:56and an argument
36:57breaks out.
37:01within seconds
37:02it's become
37:03a mass brawl.
37:07Dog units
37:08and officers
37:09race in
37:10from across
37:10the jail.
37:15A staff
37:16battle
37:17to regain control.
37:31it's taken
37:3240 staff
37:33and four
37:34dog units
37:35to quell
37:36the mass
37:36brawl
37:37on an exercise
37:37yard in Belmarsh.
37:40I head to see
37:41Charlie Pope
37:42who's accused
37:43of being involved
37:44in the fight
37:45and is now
37:46being confined
37:46to his cell.
37:48and what happened
37:49out in that yard
37:49most of these monks
37:50wouldn't have even
37:51fucking fought back.
37:52They would have run
37:53to the officers
37:54and put their arms up.
37:55We're not that sort of people.
37:57Do you think
37:57that this will interfere
37:59with you finishing
38:00the entrepreneurial course?
38:02I don't know.
38:03If they really
38:05and truly
38:06the officers
38:06could escort me
38:08down there
38:08because everyone
38:09in that program
38:10ain't got no issues
38:10with you.
38:12And I'm not worried
38:13about leaving
38:14that door.
38:15I'm not scared
38:15of anyone.
38:16Charlie didn't say
38:18what the fight
38:18was about.
38:19It rarely pays
38:21to be a grass
38:21in Belmarsh.
38:23But he must now
38:24face a prison
38:25adjudication
38:26or tribunal
38:27to find out
38:28if he'll be able
38:29to finish
38:29the business scheme.
38:32Keep going.
38:35He's on the floor there
38:36and there's another
38:36one on the floor there.
38:38Staff tried
38:39to get to the bottom
38:40of who's involved
38:41in the violence.
38:42He tripped over.
38:44He's the member
38:45Stark
38:46and the prisoner.
38:47OK.
38:49If we've not seen
38:50that,
38:50he can then be
38:50nicked for that
38:51separately.
38:55Today,
38:56a governor
38:56must decide
38:57Charlie's fate.
38:59If found guilty,
39:01he could face
39:02extra time,
39:03loss of privileges
39:04or even lose
39:06his place
39:06on the business
39:07course.
39:10take a seat.
39:12Hey,
39:13you've been charged
39:13with a 51.5
39:14fight with another
39:15person.
39:16Do you understand
39:16that charge?
39:18I ain't done
39:18nothing wrong.
39:19I've got to,
39:20you know,
39:21what have I done
39:21wrong?
39:22By just defending
39:23myself.
39:23If the staff
39:24couldn't stop the
39:24situation,
39:25what am I meant
39:25to do?
39:26Two people
39:27to the one.
39:28So,
39:29it's self-defense,
39:30God, man.
39:30OK.
39:31Well,
39:31the charge is
39:31fighting.
39:32So,
39:33from this point,
39:34do you take
39:34any part in this
39:35incident?
39:36No.
39:37Where?
39:37Where am I?
39:38Hang on,
39:38calm down a bit.
39:39What did you see
39:40me do,
39:40governor?
39:41Is this you here
39:42at the hall on the wall?
39:43Yeah,
39:43but am I fighting?
39:44Where am I fighting?
39:46It's winding me up,
39:47man.
39:48If your staff
39:48can't stop the
39:49situation and people
39:50coming at me,
39:50what am I meant
39:51to do?
39:51I am allowed
39:52to defend myself.
39:53If you can make
39:54that go slower,
39:55maybe you'll be able
39:56to see exactly
39:57what happened.
39:59Have you got any
40:00other questions?
40:01I don't,
40:01governor,
40:01but at this precise
40:02time,
40:03I'm not guilty,
40:04yeah,
40:04under self-defense.
40:05Cheers,
40:06governor,
40:06yeah?
40:07The case
40:08is adjourned.
40:12But the evidence
40:13is mounting up
40:14against Charlie.
40:20What's it like
40:20if someone says
40:21they'll get back
40:21to you and they
40:22don't?
40:22Two days on,
40:23the verdict is in.
40:25Charlie is found
40:27guilty of fighting.
40:28And the business
40:29course continues
40:30without him.
40:32This is all the
40:33work that I've been
40:34doing here.
40:36This is all the
40:37writing I've done.
40:43This afternoon
40:44and this morning,
40:46I should have went
40:47to the business
40:48skiing program.
40:49Quite upset
40:50that I didn't get
40:51to go there
40:51because I was
40:52really enjoying
40:53the program.
40:54so obviously
40:55I've missed out
40:56on it.
40:58It could have been
40:59a very big
40:59opportunity
41:00to change my life.
41:02I'm glad.
41:03100% I'm glad.
41:08Two weeks ago,
41:10some of the men
41:11on Michael Bell's
41:12gang rehab course
41:13would have been
41:14sworn enemies.
41:15How's everyone
41:16doing today,
41:16ma'am?
41:17Yeah,
41:18welcome to the
41:19last girls'
41:20graduation.
41:20But in an effort
41:21to change,
41:22they've all finished
41:23the course together.
41:24Big up to everyone
41:25for being here
41:27and big up to
41:28everyone involved,
41:28man.
41:29And, you know,
41:29we've got Governor
41:30Louie here today.
41:31She's come down
41:31to give thanks
41:32to all of you guys.
41:33Can I just make a point?
41:35Of course you can.
41:35I think people see
41:36me as a Deputy Governor,
41:37but in reality,
41:38I have a number
41:39of different hats I wear.
41:40I'm a mother
41:41and I'm a black woman
41:42and when I stepped
41:44in this room today,
41:45I look around the room
41:46and what hurts me
41:47is to see how many
41:48young black men
41:49sit in this room.
41:51Michael's taken time
41:52to give you
41:52that opportunity
41:53to be safe in here
41:55to talk about
41:55what the issues are,
41:56but how do you
41:57then translate that
41:58outside?
41:59What we've learned
42:00in here has impact.
42:01When we go into
42:02the community,
42:03what we've learned
42:04has impact, you know,
42:05on your lives
42:06and everybody else's lives.
42:07Prior to this course,
42:08there's a couple
42:09of faces here.
42:09I've seen them
42:10on the free floor
42:12and I felt like
42:12I had to, you know,
42:14be on guard,
42:14but they're good people,
42:16you know,
42:16we're all good people.
42:17Yeah, man.
42:17No doubt.
42:17Thank you for partaking
42:19in this course, man.
42:20It's been emotional,
42:21for sure.
42:21For sure.
42:32If you look around,
42:33you see smiles,
42:34you see happiness
42:35and that's not something
42:35you see often
42:37within Belmarsh
42:38and that's the truth, man.
42:39So this is a special day.
42:41It's a special day.
42:42I just don't want it
42:43to change just
42:43for being in here
42:44and I do want to believe
42:46that every single one of you
42:48will see your next birthday
42:50and the birthday after
42:51and your children's birthdays.
42:53That's what's really
42:54important to me.
42:56Make a difference
42:57for our community.
42:58That's what I want to see.
43:06Whether they're willing
43:07to change or not,
43:09Belmarsh inevitably leaves
43:11its mark on all prisoners.
43:13For the last nine weeks,
43:15Tommy Robinson
43:15has been held in isolation,
43:18separated from the rest
43:19of the prison population
43:20and today,
43:22he's being released.
43:24Is this all the stuff
43:25you've got in through the mail?
43:26Yep.
43:27Not appropriate.
43:28The next person
43:28that comes in here,
43:30they probably won't want that.
43:31We'll be walking out,
43:32taking property
43:33in a trolley.
43:35Don't come back.
43:36It still happens.
43:39It seems right to the last,
43:41Robinson is still affecting
43:43the prison's regime.
43:45He's not going to go
43:46by reception.
43:47Every prisoner
43:48who's discharged
43:49at the end of the sentence
43:50goes through reception.
43:52The reason being?
43:53The reason being is
43:54I've got other courts,
43:55I've got courts going out,
43:55I've got transfers going out.
43:57I don't want to disrupt that.
43:59So we're going to discharge
44:00him directly from here.
44:01Tommy leaving today,
44:02is that a weight
44:02off your shoulders?
44:04There'll be someone
44:04coming in this afternoon
44:06that will put the weight
44:07back set.
44:08Yeah.
44:11So how have you,
44:12how have you enjoyed
44:13Belmosh?
44:14This has been as best
44:15as could possibly be,
44:16being locked on my own
44:17for months.
44:18So I haven't been in Belmosh,
44:20I haven't looked around,
44:20I haven't seen
44:21another prisoner.
44:22I see Julian Assange
44:24through the window.
44:25Did you?
44:25Yeah, yeah.
44:26I just walk round there
44:27and the Julian Assange
44:27window's at the top.
44:28Jesus, man.
44:29I've tried to get mad
44:30around what he's going through.
44:32You can't, can you?
44:33How are you feeling
44:34right now?
44:35It's all right, yeah.
44:37You seem,
44:38you seem very emotional.
44:39Mm-hmm.
44:47It's more, yeah.
44:49I'd say that my thing is
44:50because I know I'm going
44:50home to my kids
44:51and you just won't be normal.
44:54It seems that nine weeks
44:55locked up on your own
44:56can have an effect
44:58on anyone.
45:04Yeah, it's embarrassing.
45:12For over two months,
45:14Tommy Robinson's presence
45:15here has caused disruption
45:17on both sides of the wall.
45:19But his time here
45:20has made me realise
45:22what Belmarsh deals with
45:23on a daily basis.
45:25Everything from
45:25high-profile prisoners
45:27to petty criminals,
45:29terrorists
45:30to violent gang members,
45:32all crammed
45:33under one roof.
45:34And I struggle
45:35to think of a harder
45:36place to live
45:37or work
45:38than the UK.
45:41And while we've seen
45:43a lot here,
45:43I realise
45:44we've only just begun
45:45to scratch the surface
45:47of HMP Belmarsh.
45:49Next time...
45:50Let's go to the back
45:51of the cell.
45:53There's trouble
45:54in Belmarsh.
45:55What are they doing?
45:56Fighting.
45:57A staff try to deal
45:59with prisoners
45:59on the edge...
46:00What are you doing
46:02to yourself?
46:02Look at your face.
46:03Would you kill someone?
46:04If I have to,
46:05yeah, definitely.
46:06...and tackle
46:07a new type of terrorist.
46:09Looking rather different.
46:10I will attack
46:11ISIS members.
46:12You, definitely.
46:16And we're back
46:17inside HMP Belmarsh
46:19with Ross
46:19next Thursday evening
46:20at the same time
46:21of 9 o'clock.
46:22It's looking like
46:23a great line-up of telly
46:24for you tomorrow evening
46:24on ITV
46:25with the new series
46:26of Grantchester
46:27launching at 9.
46:28And if you missed
46:28the first part
46:29of our new six-part
46:30true crime drama
46:31White House Farm,
46:32it's ready for you
46:33to watch right now
46:33on ITV Hub.
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