
In a statement released Thursday, the court advised France to “consider adopting general measures aimed at eliminating overcrowding and improving material conditions of detention”.
The move comes after the detainees complained about the conditions of their detention, including “filth” and “incessant noise” as well as the country's inability to address the problem.
Since 2011, the number of French prisoners has been steadily rising, with Ministry of Justice figures on 1 April, 2019 showing 71,828 people were being held in French prisons – a record for the country.
#Prison : Saisie notamment par des #détenus niçois, la Cour européenne des droits de l'Homme condamne la #France via @francebleuazur https://t.co/iQ0FaRm5fA
France Bleu Azur (@francebleuazur) January 30, 2020
François Bès, head of an investigation by the International Observatory of Prisons, told France Info radio last May: "Today there are more than 1,600 people in French prisons who sleep on the floor on mattresses. There are not enough beds."
According to the latest quarterly figures made public by the prison administration, prison density stands at 116 percent, down 2 percent in one year. The number of mattresses on the floor was 1,497.
A Council of Europe report published last year found that more inmates commit suicide in France than in anywhere else in Europe.
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