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Saturday, May 27, 2006

Tony Blair says the under-fire trio should stay
Tony Blair interview
Tony Blair has robustly defended his three under-fire Cabinet ministers and laughed off claims that he has suffered his own "Black Wednesday".
He was speaking after nurses booed the health secretary, John Prescott admitted an affair and Home Secretary Charles Clarke faced calls to quit.
The trio should all keep their jobs, Mr Blair told BBC News.
He added: "You know me well enough to know there's a resilience that will see through the next day's headlines."
Arsenal analogy
Mr Blair admitted Wednesday had not been a "great day" for his government but could not be compared to Black Wednesday in 1992 when people had "lost homes and jobs" as the pound slumped on the currency markets.
Shrugging off the series of attacks, he said: "The way politics works today is very, very high velocity, very high intensity and you just get used to it."
He likened forecasts about his government to the way people had written off football managers like Arsenal's Arsene Wenger, whose team have just reached the European Champions League final.
The government should take responsibility when things go spectacularly wrong on its watch
Nick CleggLib Dem home affairs spokesman
The Conservatives and Liberal Democrats are both calling for the resignation of Mr Clarke.
The home secretary apologised earlier this week after 1,023 foreign prisoners, including murderers, rapists and sex offenders, were allowed to walk free without being considered for deportation.
'Sorting it out'
Mr Blair said people should realise that the criminals had finished their sentences and had not been released early.
He admitted there had been a systemic failure on deportation but said Mr Clarke was tackling the problem.
"If you take this system, which for decades has operated in this way. To be fair to him, he is actually sorting it out," he argued.
Probation chiefs have now confidentially been given a list of the most serious offenders so they can check to see if they have committed further crimes after leaving prison.
He was similarly resolute in his defence of Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt, who was booed at the Royal College of Nurses' conference over job cuts.
Mr Blair said she should "certainly not" have offered to resign and said Labour was putting in the extra investment and reform needed to improve the NHS.
"People may shout and boo and heckle you and all the rest of it, but you've got to take the decisions that are right for the country otherwise you really shouldn't be doing the job."
'Private matter'
Deputy Prime Minister Mr Prescott had also not offered to quit after revelations of his affair with one of his secretaries, said Mr Blair.
"That is a personal matter and I'm not going to say any more about it," he argued.
Mr Blair said he was confident there had been no breach of the ministerial code or questions about propriety for Mr Prescott to answer.
Earlier, Conservative leader David Cameron renewed his attack on Mr Clarke.
He said he was "not the right person" to lead the Home Office, especially after news that there were 1,500 more foreign prisoners in British jails than first thought.
He urged Mr Blair to bring forward his Cabinet reshuffle and create a new homeland security minister so the home secretary could get on with clearing up the "mess" on crime, immigration and prisons.
Lib Dem home affairs spokesman Nick Clegg said the Home Office had structural problems because it had a ''dizzying array of things" to do.
"But the government should take responsibility when things go spectacularly wrong on its watch and that is what has happened here - if this is not a resigning issue, I simply do not know what is," said Mr Clegg.

Friday, May 26, 2006

Hear Clarke interview
Charles Clarke is being urged to resign after he admitted the Home Office freed 1,023 foreign prisoners who should have been considered for deportation.
The home secretary insisted he should sort the problem out, and received backing from Prime Minister Tony Blair.
But Tory David Davis and Lib Dem leader Sir Menzies Campbell said Mr Clarke had failed to protect the public.
The prisoners, who were released over the past seven years and include three murderers, are urgently being sought.
'Culpable failure'
Mr Davis, shadow home secretary, told MPs he was calling for Mr Clarke's resignation because it had emerged that 288 foreign offenders were released after he knew about the problem in July 2005.
Figures revealed by Sir David Normington, permanent secretary at the Home Office, show that an average of 41 prisoners per month were released between September, 2005 and last month.
I do apologise. I have apologised, I continue to do so
Charles Clarke
Analysis: Clarke on his own?
Analysis: Blair's headline hell
Tony Blair is understood to have been told about the releases before Christmas.
Speaking in the Commons, Mr Davies told Mr Clarke "that because of the culpable failure to protect the safety of the public, your position is untenable".
Mr Clarke said 83 of the 288 released prisoners were now being considered for deportation, a further 53 had completed the process and 14 had been expelled.
Mr Clarke said he would give details of efforts to track down the serious offenders who were released in error at a later date.
In a statement, he told the Commons the failure of systems within the Home Office was "deeply regrettable" and his priority was now "to set that right".
'No excuse'
"It's clear that the increasing numbers of cases being referred for consideration led to the process falling down," he said.
Mr Clarke told MPs he had said sorry for the oversight. "I do apologise. I have apologised, I continue to do so."
FOREIGN PRISONER RELEASES
September - 61
October - 49
November - 34
December - 49
January - 40
February - 30
March - 25
Sir Menzies prisoner apology
But Mr Davis said although he had known the home secretary for 30 years and had "a broad degree of respect for him", Mr Clarke's statement revealed "a disturbing neglect for public safety at the heart of this government".
"This is yet another example of your department's failure and incompetence. There is no excuse for you not knowing about this," he told Mr Clarke.
And Sir Menzies pressed the prime minister at question time to explain why he had not asked for Mr Clarke to step down.
Tory ex-Home Secretary Michael Howard also urged Mr Clarke to quit after his admission that "it was shocking failure on his part" that had led to the oversight.
"If our traditional principles of ministerial responsibility mean anything at all, he should no longer be in his job," he told the BBC.
'Police probe'
Meanwhile, police have begun processing hundreds of names from the foreign prisoner scandal and have already returned results to the Home Office.
The Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) said a team at its London HQ was running Police National Computer (PNC) checks on names being provided by the Home Office.
The checks will reveal if police have current addresses for the missing 900 criminals, and whether any have committed further crimes since their botched releases.
Earlier, Mr Blair said he did not agree with Conservative claims that Mr Clarke was unable to give the Home Office the leadership it needed.
'Systemic failure'
The prime minister has twice refused to accept the home secretary's offers to quit over foreign prisoner blunders.
Number 10 said Mr Clarke had offered to resign on Tuesday when the scandal was uncovered. In interviews, Mr Clarke said he had offered to quit on an earlier occasion as well.
Mr Blair said he regretted the oversights but added that new systems were now in place.
He made the comments after Conservative leader David Cameron claimed Mr Clarke had presided over a "systemic failure" in the Home Office and had misled the public over the scale of the problem.
"Isn't it clear that he cannot give the Home Office the leadership it so badly needs?" Mr Cameron asked, to Tory cheers.
Mr Blair retorted: "It won't surprise you to know I don't agree with that."
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Thursday, May 25, 2006

Clarke interview
Sending fewer criminals to jail is the key to improving prison and probation services in England and Wales, Home Secretary Charles Clarke has told MPs.
Criminals would have to do unpaid work which was clearly visible to the public, although the most dangerous offenders would be kept in jail.
Prison reform groups backed the five year criminal justice plan but want funding to keep jail populations down.
Tory David Davis said the plans were "minor changes" for "massive problems".
The Lib Dems welcomed the thrust of the package but condemned prison overcrowding as a "scandal".
'Better regimes'
Mr Clarke told the Commons: "Prison does not work in stopping re-offending."
Unpaid community service work could be a "powerful, effective and tough punishment", he argued.
But the new strategy needed to have public confidence, with offenders rehabilitated but people protected from dangerous criminals.
MAIN PLANS
Double amount of unpaid community work done by offenders
Make community service more visible, with signs next to working offenders
Dangerous criminals still to be locked up
Contracts where prisoners promise not to reoffend in return for housing and jobs when released
Named manager to be appointed for each offender
He plans to double the amount of unpaid work done by offenders to almost 10 million hours.
"Community payback" signs would be placed beside where the offenders worked, and plaques left after the project was completed to make the scheme visible.
Asked about reports that offenders would wear T-shirts with the "community payback" logo, a Home Office spokeswoman said: "We're not going into talking about that."
Offending contracts
Mr Clarke said: "Prison is only one way of punishing offenders and it is best for the most serious offenders, particularly those who are dangerous.
"But there are better punishment regimes for others, in particular properly organised community sentences...
which offer the best chance of stopping offenders offending again."
Mr Clarke said seriously dangerous criminals would be kept in prison for "as long as necessary".
The government also wants to make prisoners sign contracts promising not to re-offend, in return for help with housing and jobs on release.
Some offenders would also be asked to sign up to rehabilitation contracts to get them back on the straight and narrow.
The plans would also ensure there was a named manager for every offender as part of a national offender management service.
Mr Clarke said the idea of community prisons, to bridge the gap between custody and community, would be developed.
Shadow home secretary Mr Davis criticised the government's record on tackling re-offenders.
He said "community punishment had not proved a success" in the past and he asked how the new strategy would be any different.
"The public at large are not protected from a criminal who receives a non-custodial sentence," he warned.
Lib Dem spokeswoman Lynne Featherstone said Mr Clarke was right to say too many people were being sent to prison.
But she said Labour had since 1997 had time to make inroads into the problem.
She pressed for more housing support for people leaving prison and wanted to make sure rules on disclosing offences did not prevent ex-offenders get work.
Overcrowding?
Figures compiled last month suggested England and Wales had a higher proportion of the population behind bars than any other western European country.
According to the Howard League for Penal Reform, 140.4 people in every 100,000 of the population are in jail - double the rate of Scandinavian countries.
Last October Home Office figures revealed there were 77,800 inmates - just 373 short of the total capacity.
Mr Clarke said there were "segments" in the numbers in prisons where the numbers were too high, including foreign nationals, those on remand, women, young people and those on short sentences.
Juliet Lyon, from the Prison Reform Trust, said: "By reserving prison for the most violent and serious offenders Charles Clarke will score a double hit: ensuring petty offenders pay back to the community and freeing up prison staff to prevent reoffending and ensure public safety." portto kiinalainenhoroskooppi
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Mr Clarke says the process has fallen down
The home secretary says he "regrets" that 1,023 foreign prisoners have been allowed to walk free when they were meant to be considered for deportation.
They include three murderers and nine rapists, Home Office figures show.
Charles Clarke said he could not say "hand on heart" that they would all be tracked down but said he did not think it was a "resigning matter".
The Lib Dems accused ministers of incompetence. The Tories are demanding Mr Clarke answer to Parliament.
Conservative shadow home secretary David Davis accused Mr Clarke of trying to "smuggle out" the news rather than face MPs' questions.
"At the end of the day it's not good enough to blame officials, frankly it is a issue which affects the safety of the British public," argued Mr Davis.
Blair 'confidence'
He did not think Mr Clarke should consider his position as the problems began before his time in the job.
Commons speaker Michael Martin said he would ask Mr Clarke to explain why he had not made a Commons statement on the debacle.
We simply didn't make the proper arrangements for identifying and considering removal in line with the growth of numbers that were there
Charles Clarke
Your say: Foreign prisoners
Analysis: Clarke pressure
Home Office Minister Tony McNulty said he was "very, very shocked" by the news but he did not think Mr Clarke should resign.
He said he "did not think it was a case of heads will roll but we'll see".
Downing Street says Tony Blair has "full confidence" in both Mr Clarke and Mr McNulty.
"It is unreasonable to expect ministers to know what is going on in every nook and cranny in their department," said Mr Blair's official spokesman.
Drug importers
Mr Clarke said the 1,023 prisoners, who were released between February 1999 and March 2006, should have been considered for deportation or removal.
He said the failure was "deeply regrettable" and conceded that people would be angered by the oversight.
So far the Immigration and Nationality Directorate (IND) has located 107 of the total, leading to 20 deportations.
Among the offenders, five had been convicted of committing sex offences on children, seven had served time for other sex offences, 57 for violent offences and two for manslaughter.
There were also 41 burglars, 20 drug importers, 54 convicted of assault and 27 of indecent assault.
The Home Office said it did not have full details of offences committed by more than 100 of the criminals.
'No blame game'
Mr Clarke said: "It is clear that the increasing numbers of cases being referred for consideration [for deportation] led to the process falling down."
Mr Clarke said he was not going to start pointing the finger at who was to blame for the error.
All the government's tough talk on crime counts for nothing in the face of this incompetence
Sir Menzies Campbell
"Both the Prison Service and the IND failed to carry out their responsibilities in the way they ought to have done," he said.
"They have both taken steps to lead me to be confident that it is now being done properly."
He added:
"I do not intend to resign over this issue."
The courts had recommended that 160 of the criminals should be deported from Britain at the end of their sentences, it emerged.
Lin Homer, the IND's director general, said 14 of the 160 had been found. Five of those had been deported and nine considered inappropriate for removal.
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Menzies Campbell said it was "extraordinary" that so many people convicted of serious offences had "simply disappeared".
"All the government's tough talk on crime counts for nothing in the face of this incompetence," he said.
The situation only became apparent after the cross-party Commons Public Accounts Committee asked questions about released foreign prisoners during a hearing last October.
Responsibility
Former Home Secretary David Blunkett called the problems "astonishing".
"My view is that heads should roll," said Mr Blunkett.
"There are too many people in the system who simply don't care. I fully support Charles Clarke in getting to the bottom of this."
Harry Fletcher, assistant general secretary of the National Association of Probation Officers, said the chances of tracking down large numbers of released prisoners was "remote".
The Home Office was "facing crisis", said Mr Fletcher.
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Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Roy Clarke admitted sexually abusing boys and girls
A former swimming teacher who admitted abusing children in offences dating back to World War II has been jailed for 12 years at Leicester Crown Court.
Former swimming coach Roy Clarke, 79, from Duncan Road in Aylestone, admitted sexually abusing boys and girls between 1942 and 2003 at a previous hearing.
Leicestershire Police described him as "vindictive, predatory and dangerous".
The prosecution came about after a woman came forward last summer to report an historical case of abuse.
Clarke, who used to work with youngsters as the Leicester Amateur Swimming Association county coach, admitted 16 offences including gross indecency and assault which took place at his home.
'Vile desires'
He was arrested there last September.
Police managed to trace 30 people who all said they had been abused by Clarke at his house. Most thought they were the only one.
In February Clarke, who appeared at Monday's hearing in a wheelchair, admitted 16 counts of indecency with five girls and three boys aged under 16.
He is evil, and as far as I'm concerned, the only place he deserves to go is hell
Malcolm, one of Clarke's victims
Jailing him, Judge Christopher Plunkett told him: "For a period of more than 50 years you preyed on young, vulnerable children - five, six, seven and eight years old and sometimes a little older.
"In a premeditated way you won their trust and the community's trust, but you did so in a way in which you could indulge in your vile desires."
Afterwards Det Insp Lee Hill, who led the inquiry, said: "It's quite right that he's brought to justice. His health has only deteriorated over the last few months since his arrest.
"And certainly during his period on remand he received pornographic material through the post by mail order - (he is) still a person very interested in sex."
"Even during the most horrific (offences) that he did admit, there was still an element of blaming the child for that," said Det Con Debbie Timms of Leicestershire Police.
"I wouldn't say that throughout, he's ever showed any remorse and to this day it's always been the child that's in the wrong and never him."
One of Clarke's victims, Malcolm, who was abused over a four-year period in the 1970s, said: "He is evil, and as far as I'm concerned, the only place he deserves to go is hell."
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A former swimming coach has admitted carrying out sexual assaults on young children over a 50-year period.
Roy Clarke, 79, of Leicester, indecently assaulted the children - girls and boys aged from five to 10 years old - between 1944 and 1997.
The attacks happened at his home in Duncan Road, Aylestone, Leicester, Leicester Crown court heard.
Clarke, who appeared in court in a wheelchair, admitted 16 sexual offences and will be sentenced later.
The court head that Clarke, a former coach with the Leicester Amateur Swimming Association, denied a further 11 similar offences which will now remain on file.
Speaking after the case, Detective Inspector Lee Hill said: "Clarke is a predatory paedophile who carried out calculated, systematic and sickening abuse of children for his own gratification. He is a very dangerous man."
Clarke was remanded into custody after Judge Christopher Plunkett adjourned the case for reports.
He will be sentenced on 3 April. sairaaladieetti ylaosaton
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Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Senior hospital nurses said they did not have enough staff
A government claim the NHS is enjoying its "best year ever" has been attacked by nursing leaders and opposition MPs.
Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt made the assertion in a BBC Radio Five Live interview in which she said patient waiting lists were at an all time low.
The Royal College of Nursing suggested 13,000 NHS posts were set for closure in England and said nurses and patients would be surprised by her description.
Tory leader David Cameron said the NHS faced a government-created crisis.
The NHS is facing a financial deficit of more than �600m with some 7,000 job losses having already been confirmed.
The Liberal Democrats have said the true number of job cuts could be even higher than the RCN estimates but Ms Hewitt has denied such claims.
'Much pressure'
The RCN surveyed 660 hospital-based senior nurses ahead of its conference
starting in Bournemouth on Monday.
Some 45% said that there have been redundancies or a reduction in nursing posts where they work.
Real patients and real nurses do not experience this as the best year ever
Dr Beverly Malone
General secretary RCN
NHS 'enjoying best year'
Send us your comments
Nearly 60% said that they did not have enough staff to give their patients the standards of care they would like.
The RCN also surveyed 260 community nurses, such as ward sisters. Two thirds said they were under too much pressure, with 40% prepared to leave their current job if they could.
The findings come as separate RCN figures on job losses indicate that 13,000 posts have been identified by NHS managers to be lost since October last year as trusts struggle to save cash.
"Real patients and real nurses do not experience this as the best year ever," said Dr Beverly Malone, general secretary of the RCN.
"Patient services are being cut, nurses and other NHS staff are losing their jobs.
"If this is the best year ever, I dread to think what a year worse than this could look like."
'Best practice'
Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt
has denied that cuts in the NHS were due to pay rises for staff in excess of what was planned.
Hewitt interview
"There is a minority of organisations who have been overspending and that is because, in most cases, they have not adopted the best practice, like more daycare surgery, they've not organised their services as efficiently as they could," she told ITV's Jonathan Dimbleby programme.
She said "so-called job cuts" in recent weeks mainly affected agency and temporary staff and were reducing a "very inefficient and wasteful form of spending".
Ms Hewitt told the BBC: "Despite the headlines, actually the NHS has just had its best year ever".
"We have just come through one of the coldest winters for decades and we haven't had any of the winter bed crises. We got the waiting times down to the lowest level ever."
'Over centralised'
Conservative leader David Cameron told Adam Boulton on Sky News the government had "mismanaged" the health service.
"In the last month there are, I think, 9,000 people who have been threatened with losing their jobs in the NHS, we've got hospitals threatened with closure in the NHS, we've got the chief nurse saying that the system isn't working and that patient care is suffering," he said.
"We shouldn't over-use that word, but there is a crisis - these levels of redundancies, these levels of closures.
"It's a crisis that was pretty much manufactured in Downing Street."
Liberal Democrat health spokesman Steve Webb said NHS was "over centralised and mismanaged".
"It is no good for the health secretary to pretend that care does not suffer when doctors and nurses are losing their jobs," he said.
Union Unison, meanwhile, is expected to announce support this week for its hospital staff members who may decide to take industrial action over cuts.
The Department of Health acknowledged it had underestimated the financial impact of new contracts for nurses and consultants by �310m but said the figure needed to be set against an overall annual NHS pay bill of �30bn.
"Pay reform has been part of a significant success story in the NHS recruiting, retaining and motivating record numbers of staff in order to cut waiting times," a spokesperson said. huora halaus
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Hewitt interview
Despite huge job losses and mounting financial problems, the NHS is enjoying "its best year ever" according to Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt.
The service faces a financial deficit of up to �800m and some 7,000 job losses have already been confirmed.
Mrs Hewitt said: "We have just come through one of the coldest winters for decades and we haven't had any of the winter bed crises."
The Conservatives say the service's problems are down to mismanagement.
Mrs Hewitt said the NHS had "saved more lives than ever before" this year.
'No complacency'
But Ms Hewitt has denied there is a crisis, insisting the deficit amounted to no more than 1% of the NHS's total budget.
She said the job cuts - which latest estimates suggest could rise to 13,000 -
were in many cases allowing the service to operate more efficiently.
"Despite the headlines, actually the NHS has just had its best year ever," she told the BBC.
She said the government had delivered on its promise that the maximum waiting time would be six months for operations such as hip replacements.
"In the bad old days", she said, the waiting times would have been closer to two years.
The health secretary insisted she was not "complacent" about the cash problems, saying she was "determined" to sort them out before they began to threaten patient care.
Critics have claimed that NHS managers have been spending too much on staff wages, paying too high prices for some drugs and wasting cash by mismanaging cost-cutting initiatives. sexrer sex
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Monday, May 22, 2006

Hazelwood repeatedly raped his victim over a three-year period
The attorney general will consider whether the jail term handed to a paedophile who repeatedly raped a little girl is too lenient.
Kevin Hazelwood, 40, from Brighton, was jailed indefinitely on Thursday, but was told he must serve a minimum of just five years and seven months.
A spokeswoman confirmed Lord Goldsmith
had requested papers on the case.
He has 28 days to decide whether to send the case to the Appeal Court, which could increase the tariff.
He has a statutory power to review sentencing of serious offences heard in the crown court
Attorney general's spokeswoman
Last month at Lewes Crown Court, Hazelwood admitted six rapes, two attempted rapes, three sexual assaults and two indecent assaults against the girl.
He had also admitted charges of sexual activity with or in the presence of a child under 13, historic assaults on a girl dating back to the 1980s and making indecent movies of children.
He was sentenced to a minimum of four years' imprisonment for downloading pornographic images, to run concurrently with the sentence for rape and assault.
Systematic abuse
Hazelwood was on probation, under community supervision, and on a sex offenders' treatment programme at the time of the attacks.
He had been on Sex Offenders' Register for downloading child pornography, but was still able to subject the girl to a string of assaults, the court was told.
He systematically abused her over a three-year period from when she was aged about six, up until two weeks before his arrest last November.
The abuse finally came to light when the girl broke down and told her mother.
The spokeswoman for the attorney general said: "He has asked to see the case file relating to this case as he has a statutory power to review sentencing of serious offences heard in the crown court."
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Mr Clarke said the measures were an "important step forwards"
Dangerous criminals released on probation will face tougher supervision to prevent them re-offending, under new measures announced by the government.
Home Secretary Charles Clarke has proposed restrictive orders similar to those applied to sex offenders.
But judges and probation staff said the supervision system was overloaded.
The plans come as a paedophile who admitted raping a nine-year-old girl despite being under community supervision was jailed indefinitely.
Kevin Hazelwood, 40, from Brighton, Sussex, was told he must serve a minimum of five years and seven months.
There has also been concern over recent cases in which criminals on probation carried out murders such as the killings of Reading teenager Mary-Ann Leneghan and banker John Monckton in London.
Mr Clarke told the Commons the proposals would ensure violent offenders would remain under supervision after serving their sentences.
And separate measures would require all prisoners to be seen by a probation officer upon release until their sentences formally came to an end.
He said no risk "can ever be eliminated" but said the plans were "an important step forwards in protecting the public".
New conditions
Offenders sent to prison for 12 months or more are released at the halfway point on licence, and currently are subject to probationary supervision until they are three quarters of the way through their original sentence.
Beyond that point they are not supervised but can be returned to custody for the rest of their sentence if they commit another offence.
CURRENT PROBATION SERVICES
The National Probation Service supervises more than 200,000 offenders each day
About 70% have been given community sentences and 30% have been in prison but are now out on licence
Offenders are assessed and given supervision programmes
Offenders have regular contact with a probation officer - initially weekly visits
Some are placed in special hostels with restrictions
Hostel rules include curfews, CCTV, mail monitoring, observation, drug testing, bans on contacting named people and police visits - breaches can lead to recall to prison
Probation officers find and regularly monitor unpaid community work
High risk sexual and violent offenders are assessed by specialist panels and extra court orders can further restrict behaviour
Sources: National Probation Service and Home Office
New era for Probation Service
Q&A: Violent Persons Orders
Measures raise concerns
Judges would be given more powers to impose conditions on high-risk offenders once they are in the community.
Dangerous offenders could be banned from sports grounds or have limit imposed on how much alcohol they could drink.
Breaching a new violent offender order could carry a maximum of five years in jail.
In extreme cases, the order could last for the rest of the offender's life.
Mr Clarke said good behaviour in prison would no longer be seen as an important factor in determining release dates.
"I am issuing guidance to both prisons and probation staff to highlight the need to avoid over-emphasis on good behaviour in prison and the progress in addressing what are called dynamic risk factors when assessing risk prior to release," he said.
The home secretary intimated more funding will be made available from existing budgets to the Parole Board to reintroduce face-to-face interviews with prisoners before release.
In his statement, the home secretary said probation officers will be asked to focus on the most dangerous criminals.
He said he believed the probation service was willing to introduce such reform in the wake of the Monckton case.
Shadow home secretary David Davis said "much" of what is planned is welcome but added the proposals "failed to address the real problems in the probation service".
Violent criminals would not be deterred by "some kind of super-Asbo", he said.
The Liberal Democrat's spokesman on Home Affairs, Nick Clegg, broadly welcomed the proposal but questioned whether the government would provide the necessary funding.
Home Office Minister Baroness Scotland told BBC News 24 probation officer funding had been increased in recent years.
The new measures were needed to help the service become "better at identifying who it is who needs to be retained in prison and when and how and under what conditions we can safely release people."
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