NIGERIAN youngster Rilwanu Balogun committed suicide at the Glen Parva Young Offenders Institute in Leicester in 2011 to avoid being
deported an inquest was told yesterday.
Rilwanu, who came to the UK when he was seven years old, hanged
himself at the institute just a day after his 21st birthday in
Leicester. The inquest heard that Mr Balogun who had spent much of his
childhood in institutions had told staff he had nothing more to live
for.
According to evidence presented to the inquest, Mr Balogun was
transferred to Glen Parva, which holds men aged 18 to 21, in April 2011
to await deportation to Nigeria. He was found hanged on the morning of
May 8 and was taken to Leicester Royal Infirmary but died a week later.
Paul Mayfield, a senior prison officer, said: “He told me he had
nothing to live for. He said I’ll be deported back to Nigeria and I’ve
got no-one back there and I’ll be living in the slums.”
At the hearing, it was revealed that Mr Balogun had a string of
previous convictions. Inspectors, who visited the centre after Mr
Balogun’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.
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