Safeguards

All inmates are admitted to prison with a valid commitment order

yes

Prisoners can inform their families about their imprisonment

yes

There is a reception area for arriving prisoners

in some facilities

The prison service requires all correctional facilities to create an area reserved for arriving prisoners in order to prevent suicides. Few facilities have this area.1


  1. European Prison Observatory, “Prison conditions in Italy”, September 2019, p. 10. 

A copy of the prison regulations is made available to the prisoners

yes

The prison administration often gives out a booklet detailing the inmate’s rights upon admission. Elsewhere, volunteers intervene to advise the arriving prisoners.

Prisoners may voice their wishes regarding their cell assignment, although they are not always considered. In theory, defendants on remand and convicts should be separated. Prison overcrowding often makes this difficult to adhere to. Judicial authority may decide that no contact between certain prisoners is required.

Each new prisoner is entitled to an interview with a psychologist upon arrival, or at the earliest opportunity, to identify any high-risk behaviour. The NGO Antigone is concerned about the significant increase in incidents of self-harm in detention. For example, in the Florence Sollicciano prison,105 cases of self-harm are reported per 100 prisoners in 2021. This figure could be explained by the very high number of prisoners undergoing psychiatric treatment (39.5% of the total prison population), by the limited availability of therapeutic treatments, and the difficulties related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Prisoners can be assisted by a lawyer throughout their incarceration

yes

Free legal assistance is enshrined in law. The Italian government usually pays the fees for lawyers assisting disadvantaged prisoners in arrears.1


  1. European Prison Observatory, “Prison conditions in Italy”, September 2019, p. 14. 

Deaths in custody are logged in a register

yes

Number of deaths in custody

171

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2022

The documentation centre Ristretti keeps an updated register online of the number of prison deaths.

Variation in the number of deaths in custody

increase

The number of deaths in custody increases by 19,58 % between 2019 (143)1 and 2022 (171).


  1. ministry of Justice, [Eventi critici negli istituti penitenziari] (https://www.giustizia.it/giustizia/it/mg_1_14.page

Number of deaths attributed to suicide

84

i
2022
  • The Naples Criminal Division published a report on the deaths of 38 incarcerated persons in the city’s prisons since the beginning of the year. The report criticises the “inhumane” imprisonment conditions and the systemic shortcomings, including insufficient medical care, that contribute to these deaths. A protest was organised in front of Poggioreale Prison to call attention to the urgent need to improve how incarcerated persons are treated.

    i
    05/06/2024
    / Ansa It
  • Twenty-eight suicides were recorded between January and April 2024.

    i
    09/04/2024
    / Antigone

Variation in the number of suicides

increase

The number of suicides increases by 58,5 % between 2019 (53)1 and 2022 (84).

A total of 583 suicides were recorded in prisons between 2012 and 2022.

Death rate in custody (per 10,000 prisoners)

30.5

i
2022
/ Council of Europe, SPACE I Report 2023, table 28.

Suicide rate in custody (per 10,000 prisoners)

15

i
2022
/ Council of Europe, SPACE I Report 2023, table 28.

The MNP recorded 12,294 acts of self-harm in 2022. This is an increase of 8.43% on the previous year (11,338).1


  1. National guarantor of the rights of persons detained or deprived of their liberty, Report to Parliament 2022 - Maps and data, pp. 41-42 (in Italian). 

National suicide rate (per 10,000 inhabitants)

0.67

6.7 for 100 000 inhabitants

i
2021

The prison service must notify a judicial authority for

some deaths

i
An internal medical report is required for every prison death. Where necessary, the prison service forwards this to the judicial authority for further investigation.

An internal medical report is required for every prison death. Where necessary, the prison service forwards this to the judicial authority for further investigation.

  • The Viterbo court convicted the Viterbo prison governor of negligence concerning the investigation into the death of Hassan Sharaf. The 21-year-old man hanged himself with a sheet on 23 July 2018 in one of the facility’s solitary confinement cells.

    i
    2024
    / Antigone

The prison service is required to inform the deceased person’s relatives as soon as possible (Article 29 of the Prison Rules).

Suicide prevention policies are implemented

yes

The prison service has implemented national and regional suicide prevention plans. They promote the collection of data on local, regional and national scales, which should enable suicidal tendencies to be detected. At-risk prisoners receive psychological support from professionals and volunteers. They can also qualify for additional visits and telephone calls. The prison staff is required to remain vigilant to identify high-risk situations.1


  1. Ministry of Justice, National plan to prevent suicidal behaviour (Piano nazionale per la pevenzione delle condotte suicidarie nel sistema penitenziario per adulti), 2017 (in Italian). 

  • Demonstrations were organised in response to two months of inaction following the appeal by the President of the Republic for urgent measures to prevent suicides in prison. Samuele Ciambriello, the guarantor of Campania, and Don Tonino Palmese, a municipal guarantor, called for immediate reform during a press conference held in front of Poggioreale Prison in Naples.
    Poggioreale has a capacity of 1,358 spaces and currently holds 2,067 incarcerated people. Campania is the second most overpopulated region, with 7,573 incarcerated people in 5,645 spaces.

    i
    18/05/2024
    / Ansa it

In 2020, the CPT reported violence and ill-treatment towards prisoners in the facilities they had visited. The acts were usually committed out of sight of video surveillance, for example in the staircases.1
In 2021, numerous allegations of violence, torture, abuse and ill-treatment have resulted in investigations, criminal proceedings and indictments against prison officers. The NGO Antigone joins 18 of these criminal proceedings. According to the NGO, some of the facts are related to alleged violent reactions during prison riots between March and April 2020, that took place as a response to the fear generated by the COVID-19 pandemic and the ban on family visits. In December 2021, the Public Prosecutor requested the indictment of 108 prison officers for the violence committed against the prisoners of the Santa Maria Capua Vetere prison. This violence had broken out on 6 April 2020, in the wake of a mutiny. The guards are being prosecuted for the crimes of torture, injury, abuse of authority, falsification of a public documents and complicity in the manslaughter of a prisoner.

In 2022, twenty-two prison officers were charged with allegations of torture of people held in a Turin prison. The former director of the prison was one of them.


  1. European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, “Report to the Italian Government on the Visit from 12–22 March 2019”, 2020, pp.11-15. 

  • Ten guards from Foggia Prison were arrested on accusations of participating in beating up two incarcerated persons in August 2023.

    i
    2024
    / Ansa it

The prohibition of torture is enshrined in the Constitution and the legislation

only in the legislation

Parliament approved the law of 14 July 2017 explicitly prohibiting torture. This is reflected in Articles 613-bis and 613-ter of the penal code.

The United Nations Convention against Torture (UNCAT) was

ratified in 1989

signed in 1985

Sexual harassment is punishable by a prison sentence of up to six months and a fine of 516 euros. Article 613 of the penal code punishes physical assaults and acts of cruelty with 5 to 12 years in prison. The penalty is raised to 30 years of imprisonment where these acts lead to the death of the victim.

All allegations and suspicions of ill-treatment inflicted on prisoners are logged

yes

During their visit in 2019, the CPT consulted the medical records of prisoners complaining of ill-treatment by staff. They found numerous complaints.
They advised the prison service to record all incidents more carefully, whether confirmed or alleged, and to extend their video surveillance network.1


  1. European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, “Report to the Italian Government on the Visit from 12–22 March 2019”, 2020, pp. 16-17. 

  • Following the exposure of repeated acts of torture within the Cesare Beccaria juvenile prison institution in Milan, around a dozen prison officers were placed in pre-trial imprisonment.

    i
    24/04/2024
    / il Fatto Quotidiano
  • The public prosecutor charged prison officers with ill-treatment, acts of torture and attempted sexual assault against incarcerated minors at the Cesare Beccaria juvenile prison institution in Milan. The incidents date back as far as 2022.

    i
    22/04/2024
    / Corriere della sera

If so, the prison service must notify a judicial authority

yes
  • One hundred and five prison officers, officials and doctors were accused of violence committed at the Santa Maria Capua Vetere prison. Four incarcerated persons instituted these civil proceedings. Some of the accused attempted to avoid appearing before the court by sending in medical certificates. The court issued a bench warrant against one of them.

    i
    08/05/2024
    / Anteprima24 It

Doctors are not trained to identify signs of torture.

Number of recorded violent acts between prisoners

4,547

The number of violent acts recorded between prisoners increases by 11,75 % between 2021 (4 069) and 2022.

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2022
/ National guarantor of the rights of persons detained or deprived of their liberty, Report to Parliament 2022 - Maps and data, pp. 41-42 (in Italian).

Prisoners victim to violence and/or sexual harassment from other prisoners are entitled to the same rights (compensation and punishment for those responsible) as free people. A study led by Antigone in 2019 found that this procedure is particularly complex. It is difficult to gather evidence, and testimonies are often unreliable. Transfers prove to be the only effective protection for prisoners victim to violence.

Each prison facility keeps an updated record of violence between inmates

yes

Acts of violence between prisoners are investigated

yes

Number of complaints filed by prisoners against the prison service

576

The number of complaints received by the NPM decreases by 25 % between 2020 (277) and 2021.

i
2021
/ National guarantor of the rights of persons detained or deprived of their liberty, Report to Parliament 2022, p. 159 (in Italian).

Article 35-bis of the prison rules allows prisoners to complain against the prison service.

Inspection judges (magistrati di sorveglianza) are authorised to receive prisoners’ complaints. They are independent from the prison service. As a last resort, prisoners can also claim their rights with the ECHR.

The Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (OPCAT) was

ratified in 2013

signed in 2003

An NPM has been established

yes, in 2014

Name of the NPM

Garante nazionale dei diritti delle persone detenute o private della libertà personale

National Guarantor for the Rights of Individuals Detained or Deprived of their Liberty

The NPM has come into office

yes, in 2016

The NPM was appointed by

the Executive Power and the Parliament

Members of the NPM are nominated by the Council of Ministers and appointed by the President of the Republic, after hearings from relevant parliamentary committees.

Structure of the NPM

collegiate body, three members

The President of the NPM and the two members nominated by the council cannot be members of prison or ministerial staff.

Term of office of the NPM

five years, non-renewable, irrevocable

The NPM reports are made public

yes

Annual NPM reports are handed over to Parliament between March and April, and subsequently published online. Each site visit is subject to a report.

Number of visits made by the NPM during the year

40

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2022
/ National Guarantor for the Rights of Individuals Detained or Deprived of their Liberty, Report to Parliament 2022, pp. 140-141 (in Italian).

Between the 1st of May 2021 and the 13th of May 2022, the NPM visited 38 prisons and 2 juvenile prisons.

The number of visits decreased by 55.5% compared to the period from 1 January 2018 to 31 January 2019, when 90 visits were carried out by the NPM.

The legislation allows the NPM to carry out unannounced visits

yes

The NPM can conduct both routine and unannounced visits. Routine visits are regional and have a specific purpose. Unannounced visits are ad hoc and aim to monitor.

A complaint can be filed with the NPM by prisoners, their relatives, their lawyer or any other individual. Large numbers of complaints coming from the same facility will usually lead to a visit.

The NPM can monitor all prison facilities, units and premises

yes

The NPM recommendations are effectively implemented

in some cases

The NPM directs its remarks and recommendations to the prison administration. In the event of disagreement, the administration then has 30 days to respond. All remarks, recommendations and responses are published on the NPM’s website. The names of those involved are not disclosed. The mandate of the NPM allows them to see for themselves whether their recommendations have been taken into account.

A regional body monitors the places of deprivation of liberty

yes

The European Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT).

Its reports are made public

yes

The Subcommittee for the Prevention of Torture (SPT) has visited the country

yes

From 16 to 22 Septembre 2015

Its report was made public

yes

The report from the Subcommittee for the Prevention of Torture’s visit was published on 23 September 2016.

Antigone is authorised to visit all correctional facilities. As was the case for 99 facilities in 2021. The association is not permitted to engage with prisoners during these visits.

The Prisons Observatory (Osservatorio Carcere), established in 2006, visits facilities and issues recommendations. It consists of a government official and a working group.

Independent monitoring bodies are present in most Italian regions. Regional councils locally appoint a mediator (Garante regionale dei diritti della persona). They are responsible for issues within the prisons. Their role is to promote and ensure the rights of individuals, particularly in the event of a conflict with the administration.

The law provides for a sentence adjustment system

yes

The Supervision Court (tribunali di sorveglianza) has the authority to grant sentence adjustments.

The sentence can be adjusted as soon as it is pronounced (ab initio)

yes

Those sentenced to less than three years of imprisonment, or whose remaining sentence is less than three years, are eligible for probation. Their profile is taken into account.

Sentence adjustments can be granted during the incarceration

yes

Granting sentence adjustments during incarceration is conditional upon “good behaviour” and often also upon involvement in activities. A remission of 45 days may be granted for each six-month period of imprisonment.

Prisoners can contest a negative decision of sentence adjustment

yes

Specific categories of prisoners are ineligible for sentence adjustment

yes

Those convicted of criminal organisation in connection with the mafia are ineligible for sentence adjustments unless they cooperate with the justice system.
In 2019, Italy was found guilty by the ECHR in the Viola vs. Italy case for the life sentence without possible adjustment and inhuman detention conditions imposed upon prisoners convicted of terrorism or with links to a mafia group.

The law provides for a temporary release system

yes

“Good behaviour” may allow for up to 15 days of temporary release.

Temporary release can be granted to prisoners serving sentences of less than four years, or those having already served at least a quarter of their sentence (ten years minimum for those with life sentences).

The law provides for a sentence adjustment for medical reasons

yes

Prisoners who are ill may be placed under house arrest.

Number of prisoners who have been granted a presidential pardon or amnesty during the year

0

i
2022
/ Council of Europe, SPACE I Report 2023, table C.

35 prisoners have been granted a presidential pardon or amnesty since the 3rd of February 2015.1