Ben Gunn, Guardian. Monday September 14th, 2009
There is an interesting debate growing in the UK. Should prisoners be allowed to blog?
Ben Gunn, who claims to be the only serving UK prisoner who blogs, had a letter to his wife intercepted by the prison governor and told “the content is interesting enough to be published on the internet” and on this ground it was stopped from leaving the prison.
Gunn set up the blog at the end of August. He writes the content and his editor posts it to the web.
Gunn has caused a stir with forthright opinions on politicised victims groups, spineless politicians and poor prison management. These, he argues, are not fallacious rants, but genuine problems of an overly-punitive system and disengaged society.
Furthermore, Gunn argues that despite his original sentence of 10 years, he remains in prison after 30 because he has continuously challenged the prison authorities. At present Gunn is engaged in research towards a PhD, focused upon the role of Human Needs Theory in prison conflicts.
My question “How do we feel about Prison Bloggers?” is largely rhetorical. How we feel about them makes no impingement on their lawful right to write and publish from prison. Let’s be absolutely clear here. Gunn is breaking NO LAW.
The only law that may pertain is that Gunn may receive no compensation for his writing while a ward of the prison service. But this was never the issue at stake. Gunn’s free speech was deliberately quashed by the administration of a system that stood to face criticism through his words.
The official position as summarised by another excellent prison rights blogger John Hirst (The Jailhouse Lawyer):
The Ministry of Justice writes: “There is no specific Prison Service policy on prisoners using or posting blogs, as they do not have direct unregulated access to computers or the internet”. However, the reply goes on to to say that it can be implied from Prison Service order 4411, that a prisoner cannot ask someone else to communicate what the prisoner is not in a position to do himself and which violates the rules. The MoJ has clearly failed to take into account the human right to freedom of expression guaranteed under article 10 of the European convention, and prisoners’ rights to contact the media “on matters of legitimate public interest“.
I agree with many of Gunn’s positions, I don’t appreciate his tone sometimes, but I think he must absolutely exist within the dialogue about British criminal justice. His thoughts as a serving prisoner are of central value to debate and an informed public.
The echoes ring true and far. Gunn’s concerns over misinformation, scare-mongering and codes of silence are as acute (if not moreso) in the US prison industry.
I’ll leave you with Gunn’s view on prevailing distortions to debate and his admirable defiance:
In reducing discussions to trite slogans and vote-grubbing soundbites, we debase ourselves as a collective and as people. I realise that I pose a challenge, but regardless of any efforts expended by the government I am not going away.
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As well as the Guardian sources linked in this article, the BBC picked up on this story and includes a brief but informative audio discussion of the issue.
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Editor’s note: It seems strange that in the UK this quasi-controversial issue has taken a long time to rear its head – after all, Michael Santos has been blogging from US federal prisons at his own Prison Journal and as a guest at Change.org since January 2009.
5 comments
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September 15, 2009 at 1:39 am
ciara leeming
I don’t actually see what the difference is between this and the case of the Guardian columnist Erwin James, who was quite openly writing for the paper during his last years inside. It’s a difficult call but if the inmate doesn’t have access to the internet – which I think is right – then it’s hard to see what the problem is.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2009/apr/24/erwin-james-monahan-guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2009/apr/24/erwin-james-journalism
September 15, 2009 at 1:49 am
petebrook
Ciara. I agree with you. I think the prison authorities might be more sketched out here because a blog doesn’t have the editorial oversight as the Guardian does.
Any entity can pursue – through legal channels – a grievance with a newspaper, but the prison service can’t really effect the life of this prisoner anymore than it already is doing! Gunn’s locked up and presumably has few assets. HMPS has little alternative than to abuse its power and silence him.
September 17, 2009 at 4:18 pm
jailhouselawyer
I am biased, I think this is a wake up call for the Criminal Justice System.
“Editor’s note: It seems strange that in the UK this quasi-controversial issue has taken a long time to rear its head”. The MSM is slow, investigative journalism all but dead. The new media is running this show, and doing very well.
Today, I rang the Ministry of Justice press office for a comment on my question: why is the MoJ breaking the law on this issue? I was informed that blogs are not media. I replied its the new media. I was told “no comment”. I asked, “Your response as to why you are breaking the law is ‘no comment?”. I was told “Yes”.
I am sorry, but that is just not good enough!
April 6, 2011 at 3:47 pm
NICHE + UNIQUE = UNICHE (And Future Blog Survival Depends On It … Maybe) « Prison Photography
[…] wrote about Gunn’s position as a pioneer incarcerated blogger a couple of years ago when one of his letters containing content deemed by the prison governor as […]
April 21, 2011 at 7:47 pm
exclusiveprisoner
I have one particular blog by a prisoner that I read regularly. I enjoy the insight shared as someone makes changes in their life. Imagine if you were a smoker and really wanted to stop. The desire to change a life of criminal behavior is no less challenging. After years in prison, many just tire of the dysfunctional institutional life. Even after the realization that life can be better, there is always the challenge of a corrupt and criminal environment. Some inmates never get the epiphany that others do. They become institutionalized and can look no further ahead in life but to the next chow line.
By blogging, the inmate journals, reflects and can later look back at his writings and see progress in his/her thinking process. The more they become a changed, remorseful being, the more difficult it is for them to remain in the institution with other “not so enlightened” criminals. Blogging is a healthy outlet for inmates and comments from the public can be helpful too.
http://www.exclusiveprisoner.com