From the gulags to a 'five star jail': Inside Putin's £115million detention centre that is the largest in Europe with 4,000 inmates, a concert hall and even a museum
- December 10th, 2015
This is the first glimpse
inside the largest detention centre in Europe that is currently
preparing to open on the outskirts of Vladimir Putin's home city of St
Petersburg.
The giant jail will hold
4,000 inmates and replaces the notorious Kresty prison which housed
political prisoners during the tsarist and Soviet eras.
Called Kresty-2, the new
penitentiary, announced personally by Putin nine years ago, will
accommodate both men and women - including those with young children -
in separate facilities.
The new prison Photo by: pictured
The vast structure was built at a cost of £115million and is capable of holding 4,000 men and women inmates
The
prison has been described as the 'cosiest' of all prisons in Russia and
a 'five-star jail' due to its underfloor heating and other comforts
From the country that
brought gulags to the world, this £115million factory-scale detention
centre is described as a 'five star jail' and the 'cosiest' of all
prisons in Russia.
It has heated floors
designed for inmates' walks in special recreation zones atop the jail's
gargantuan towers, while it is also the first prison in Russia to deploy
travelators to traverse its endless corridors.
Prison chiefs boast that
it is 'impossible to escape' from Kresty-2, a claim that will be tested
when the first inmates arrive here in the St Petersburg suburb of
Kolpino in the coming weeks.
Instead of the traditional
Soviet-era image of watchtowers and visible armed guards, it deploys a
battery of anti-escape electronic sensors in walls and floors.
Inmates will be offered 'in-cell' dining, with airline economy class-style food passed through a door hatch.
Occupying a 35 hectare
site, its main function is as a detention centre for people awaiting
trial, and it is to get a dedicated railway station. Among its
facilities are a 'fighting room' and saunas - but the shooting range
will only be for the use of the institution's 1,500 staff.
It will have an Orthodox church, a hospital, concert hall and even a museum.
The facility will have two
classes of inmates, with between 250 and 400 of the 4,000 allowed
privileges for working as 'housekeepers' and qualifying for better
accommodation in separate 'dormitories'.
The facility will have two classes of inmates, with up to 400 of the 4,000 total prisoners allowed privileges for working jobs
The
country's prison service bosses say the jail will be the most modern in
Europe and is designed to fit with 'European standards'
The
massive project was announced nine years ago after a review of its
predecessor, Kresty, found the jail to be vastly overpopulated
All detainees will have a choice of wearing a uniform or their own clothes.
For those not happy with
the most modern jail in Russia, there will be punishment sweat boxes for
216 inmates, and also single cells for the most dangerous detainees.
'It will be the most
modern prison in Russia and the biggest in Europe,' said Gennady
Kornienko, head of Russia's prison service. 'Every inmate will be
allocated seven square metres which fits "European standards",' he said.
The first inmates will
arrive in the new year, but by the time the detention centre is fully
functioning another £43million will be added to the cost.
Europe's current largest
prison is believed to be France's Fleury-Merogis Prison on the outskirts
of Paris which can hold some 3,800 detainees.
The new Russian facility
is also a court house and police station. It will have four functioning
courts and 150 rooms for investigators to interrogate those held on
remand, and detainees to consult their lawyers.
Among those jailed in the
old red brick Kresty - which maybe redeveloped as a luxury hotel after
the site is auctioned - were revolutionary Leon Trotsky as well as
members of the provisional government, which was toppled by Lenin in the
Bolshevik Revolution.
Pictured
is a typical dormitory cell in one of the prison blocks, where certain
prisoners will be allowed to share a relatively spacious room
Those who live in the dormitories Photo by: pictured
Pictured
is a typical shower block inside the brand new prison. Remarkably, the
facility also includes a museum and concert hall
The prison has been constructed to replace Kresty, a grim prison currently holding 1,150 inmates which dates back to the 1730s
By the mid 1990s, the original Kresty held more than 12,500 inmates - more than ten times its capacity. Pictured is the bathroom of its replacement, on the outskirts of St PetersburgAdd caption |
Prison chiefs boast that it is 'impossible to escape' from Kresty-2 Photo by: pictured
This grim prison,
currently holding 1,150 inmates to be transferred to the new facility,
dates back to the 1730s but was redeveloped in the reign of Tsar
Alexander III by Anthony Tomishko, whose ghost is said to still haunt
it.
In the first revolution of
1917, the jail was stormed in an attempt to emulate the 'Storming of
the Bastille' from the French Revolution.
By the mid 1990s, it held more than 12,500 inmates - more than ten times its capacity.
Vladimir Lukin, Russia's
former human rights ombudsman, found during a visit to Kresty in 2008
'that the prison hospital was grossly inadequate and that prisoners in
significant numbers had cut their arms with razor blades in protest at
their conditions,' according to leaked U.S. Embassy cables hosted by
WikiLeaks.
Russia has the third highest prison population in the world, after the U.S. and China.
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