It has been established that a young man Riliwanu Balogan who was
found hanged at Glen Parva Young Offender’s Institute in Leicester in 2011, a
day after his 21st birthday did so because he did not want to be deported to
his home country NigeriaThe inquest heard he had told staff he had nothing to live for. The hearing coincided with the release of a report which said the centre had improved but there were still problems.
The jury inquest, which finished Thursday, January 24, 2013, heard Mr Balogan moved to the UK when he was seven-years-old and spent much of his childhood in institutions. He was transferred to Glen Parva, which holds men aged 18 to 21, in April 2011 to await deportation.
The morning he was found hanged on 8 May 2011 he was assessed by staff after cutting himself.
Paul Mayfield, a senior prison officer, said at the hearing: "He told me he had nothing to live for. He said ‘I’ll be deported back to Nigeria. I’ve got no-one back there. I’ll be living in the slums."
He was taken to Leicester Royal Infirmary after staff tried to revive him but died a week later.
The hearing also heard he had a string of previous convictions and that at the end of April he struggled to speak to a nurse because he was sobbing so hard.
An interim report by the Inspectorate of Prisons showed the institute was "making sufficient progress" since its last inspection in 2009.
Inspectors, who visited after Mr Balogan’s death, said they were pleased to see improvements in the management of vulnerable prisoners and that suicide and self-harm was "generally well-managed". But concerns were raised over dirty accommodation and the limited amount of time detainees spent outside their cells.
On Thursday, the jury recorded a verdict of misadventure.
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Na set up cos naija man go rather go back to his mother land than to commit suicide. Maybe the story na cook story cos ar no trust ckn@deeloc,okene.
ReplyDeleteHe shud hav just gone bak rather than hung himsef
ReplyDeleteHe died not knowing how to survive here. The oyinbo people don't like us,why couldn't they protect him when he said he didn't have any where to go. killing himself is not the best way to live either.
ReplyDeleteIts sad that suicide was a better option than coming to Nigeria.
ReplyDeleteThis is madnesssss
ReplyDeleteHonestly, suicide is an option to any Nigerian deportee considering the hopeless nature of things in Nigeria. No light,water,healthcare,road,education etc. Nigerians are use to medicore life thus d dont complain unlike someone who has tested quality life abroad. R.I.P Bros!
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