London: The British government has announced new sentencing plans that could prevent offenders from going to pubs, attending music concerts, or entering sports events such as football matches, in a bid to ease the country’s severe prison overcrowding crisis.
Under the proposals, judges will gain broader powers to restrict offenders’ freedoms through measures including travel bans, driving limits, and confinement to designated zones. The government said that these restrictions are designed to keep offenders ‘on the straight-and-narrow’ while allowing justice to be served outside prison walls.
Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood explained the rationale, stating that, “When criminals break society’s rules, they must be punished. Those serving their sentences in the community must have their freedom restricted there too.”
Britain currently has the highest incarceration rate in Western Europe, according to the World Prison Brief database, and has already been forced to adopt emergency measures such as early prisoner release to cope with chronic overcrowding.

The government announced that the new steps, which will be officially unveiled on August 23, are part of wider reforms aimed at reducing crime and ensuring sufficient prison capacity for the most dangerous offenders.
One of the changes includes expanding the use of soccer match bans. Currently, courts can only impose such orders when crimes are committed inside stadiums. The new rules will allow judges to issue match bans for any type of offence in any circumstance.
Additionally, the reforms will extend restrictions to all prisoners leaving jail under Probation Service supervision. These individuals could face conditions similar to those imposed during sentencing, including mandatory drug testing, which is currently applied only to offenders with a known history of substance misuse.
The government warned that anyone who breaches these new rules risks being returned to court or sent back to prison.

