The Week The Week
flag of US
US
flag of UK
UK
https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/flexiimages/jacafc5zvs1692883516.jpg

SUBSCRIBE & SAVE

Less than $3 per week

Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • The Explainer
  • Talking Points
  • The Week Recommends
  • Newsletters
  • Cartoons
  • From the Magazine
  • The Week Junior
  • More
    • Politics
    • World News
    • Business
    • Health
    • Science
    • Food & Drink
    • Travel
    • Culture
    • History
    • Personal Finance
    • Puzzles
    • Photos
    • The Blend
    • All Categories
  • Newsletter sign up Newsletter
  • The Week Evening Review
    Erroneous releases, the new deputy PM, and turmoil in Cameroon

     
    The Explainer

    Why are so many prisoners being released by mistake?

    The government has launched an independent investigation after the accidental release of a “high-profile” prisoner “left jaws on the floor”, said the BBC’s political editor Chris Mason. Ethiopian national Hadush Kebatu was due to be deported after being jailed for 12 months in September for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl and a woman. Instead, he was mistakenly released on Friday, before being recaptured on Sunday.

    How do prisoners get released in error?
    In the year to March, 262 prisoners were released in error, a 128% increase from the previous year, according to government data. The prison population in England and Wales is about 86,000.

    Last September, during the government’s emergency prison release scheme to tackle overcrowding, 37 inmates were freed in error because their offences were wrongly logged under repealed legislation. In other mishaps, a computer system designed to automate the calculation of release dates has “failed to function as planned”, forcing prison staff to “work out complex release calculations by hand”, said The i Paper.

    The prison where Kebatu was jailed was “conned into freeing a fraudster” in 2023, said The Times. HMP Chelmsford received an email purporting to be from the Royal Courts of Justice ordering the release an inmate awaiting trial. Only after staff received further release orders about other prisoners did they realise “the emails were fake”.

    Why are release mistakes increasing?
    Overcrowding could be “one of the reasons”, Ian Acheson, a former prison governor, told The Telegraph. There are “literally thousands of movements a year” of people going to and from courts and different jails, said another former governor, John Podmore.

    The number of prisoners held on remand awaiting trial has also soared to more than 17,500. These inmates have to be “regularly transferred to and from court for hearings”, which increases pressure on the “often inexperienced officers”, the paper said.

    What can be done?
    Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy told the Commons yesterday that he had “taken immediate action to introduce the strongest release checks ever”. Going forward, a prison duty governor must be physically present when any foreign criminal is being released early to be deported. There will be a “clear checklist with governors required to confirm every step has been followed”, the government said.

     
     
    Today’s Big Question

    Will Lucy Powell help or hinder Keir Starmer?

    “We have to seize back the political megaphone, set the agenda more strongly and show that Labour is making a difference to people’s lives.” In her acceptance speech after winning Labour’s deputy leadership contest, Lucy Powell made it clear where she thinks her party has gone wrong.

    After being sacked last month from her cabinet post as Leader of the House of Commons, Powell suggested she had given “feedback people didn’t want to hear”. But the Manchester Central MP now has the power to push Keir Starmer towards her vision of “bold policies, rooted in progressive Labour values”.

    What did the commentators say?
    Powell had “long been seen as more of a challenger to the current status quo” than her rival for the deputy leadership, Bridget Phillipson, said The Independent’s political correspondent Millie Cooke. And her victory is seen as “a call from the Labour membership for a new direction amid growing unhappiness” with the prime minister’s government. 

    As well as being “openly critical” of this government’s “unforced errors” on welfare reform and the winter fuel payment, Powell has called for an end to the two-child benefit cap and criticised the Equality and Human Rights Commission’s guidance on trans issues. Given these points of policy contention, said Cooke, she is “likely, at least at first, to be a thorn” in Starmer’s side.

    The PM clearly favoured Phillipson to be his deputy, said The Observer’s associate editor Andrew Rawnsley, but there may be room to turn potential “peril” into “opportunity”. Powell could be deployed as a “punchy advocate” of the party’s achievements and “a facilitator of constructively critical conversation about where it is going wrong”. 

    What next?
    Powell is expected to remain on the backbenches, but she could, in time, “become a lightning rod for discontent”, said Sky News’ political editor Beth Rigby. 

    Next May’s elections for the Welsh Senedd are regarded as a moment of maximum danger for Starmer, and could be when Powell’s influence really matters. If Labour loses its century-long dominance in Wales, Starmer “will undoubtedly face some calls to stand down”, said Morgan Jones in The Guardian. “It’s hard to picture Powell as the smiler with the knife – but equally difficult to imagine her being hugely energetic in any endeavours to keep Starmer in No. 10.”

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “Don’t bet against Melissa. It is not a bet that we can win.”

    Jamaica’s Local Government Minister Desmond McKenzie urges residents of the Caribbean nation to seek shelter before the Category 5 storm makes landfall. At least seven hurricane-related deaths have been reported across the Caribbean so far, as winds increase to 185mph.  

     
     

    Poll watch

    More than half (54%) of Britons believe in ghosts, and 52% claim to have seen one with their own eyes. Of 2,000 adults polled for car rental firm Drivalia, 66% said they love visiting spooky spots, with the Tower of London topping the list of favourite haunts.

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    Cameroon’s fight to unseat world’s oldest president

    Cameroon’s Constitutional Council yesterday upheld President Paul Biya’s contested victory in this month’s elections. The council ruled that the incumbent had received 53.66% of the vote, while opposition candidate Issa Tchiroma Bakary won 35.19%.

    At the age of 92, Biya is the world’s oldest elected leader as he enters his eighth term in office. Previous votes in Cameroon were also decried as unfair, but the most recent presidential election saw long-standing tensions spill onto the streets.

    Tampering allegations
    Tchiroma claimed victory days after voters went to the polls on 12 October, and accused the Biya regime of  vote tampering, “echoing civil society groups’ earlier reports of ‘several irregularities,’ including attempted ballot stuffing”, said The Associated Press. Dismissing those claims, Biya “accused the opposition candidate of trying to disrupt the electoral process”, as “pockets of protests broke out in several cities”.

    At least four people have been killed in clashes between protesters and security forces in the country’s economic capital, Douala, and “police fired tear gas” into crowds in Tchiroma’s home city of Garoua, said Al Jazeera. The protesters were further angered by an internet outage that partially cut off web access in the country. Officials blamed the outage on “a submarine cable cut”, but the government previously “shut down the internet to suppress demonstrations in 2017”, said Bloomberg.

    Test of stability
    Biya will now “extend his presidency by another seven years and lead the oil-exporting nation until he’s almost 100”, said Bloomberg. Most people in Cameroon, where the “median age is 18, have never experienced life under any other president”.

    Despite his “advanced age and declining health” – he is rarely seen in public – Biya’s ministers insist he can tackle the issues facing the country, said The Guardian. In addition to “political stagnation”, Cameroon is grappling with “significant socioeconomic challenges”, as well as “ongoing conflicts” with jihadist insurgency Boko Haram in the north and a separatist militia in the west.

    “What comes next will be a test for Cameroon’s stability,” Comfort Ero, president of the non-profit International Crisis Group, told The Africa Report. Authorities should “avoid attempting to resolve the emerging electoral crisis by force”.

     
     

    Good day 🌍

    … for the green agenda, after new research found that wind power reduced UK energy bills by £104.3 billion between 2010 and 2023. The surge in renewable energy generation cut gas prices by lowering demand and reduced the need for electricity companies to built new gas-fired power stations, according to the University College London study.

     
     

    Bad day 🖥️

    … for tech minions, as Amazon prepares to axe 14,000 jobs – about 5% of its corporate workforce. The tech giant is poised to announce record third-quarter sales of around $179 billion later this week, but said it needed to be “organised more leanly” to capitalise on the opportunities provided by artificial intelligence.

     
     
    picture of the day

    In command

    Police officers escort suspects out of Rio de Janeiro’s Vila Cruzeiro favela. Security forces have launched an operation involving at least 2,500 agents to arrest drug traffickers from the Comando Vermelho, one of the foremost criminal organisations in Brazil.

    Mauro Pimentel / AFP / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily crossword

    Test your general knowledge with The Week’s daily crossword, part of our puzzles section, which also includes sudoku and codewords

    Play here

     
     
    THE WEEK RECOMMENDS

    The best adventure holidays for adrenaline junkies

    Sometimes a relaxing beach holiday doesn’t quite cut it. Whatever the weather, an adventure holiday can offer fun and thrilling memories.

    Everest Base Camp, Nepal
    Everest is a “quintessential bucket-list” destination, said Outlook Traveller. Scaling the full summit is riddled with danger, but exploring the “roof of the world” with a trek to the base camp allows climbers to soak up “incomparable” views in safety. The best times to travel are pre- and post-monsoon (March–May and September–November), when the weather is “less full of surprises”.

    Horse riding in the desert, Mongolia
    Expect “undoubtedly epic” sights from the saddle in Mongolia’s Gobi Desert, said National Geographic. Home to the Mongol Derby, a 620-mile endurance race on semi-wild horses, adventure is never far. For something more laid-back, consider a five-day holiday riding for an average of about 20 miles a day. Visit Buddhist temples and nomadic families on horseback and camp beneath the “starry skies”.

    Hiking in the Dolomites, Italy
    Italians “caught on to the joys of a Dolomites summer during the pandemic”, said The Times. One of the “favourite” mountain paths, from Cortina following the Alta Via 1, “cheats” by incorporating links to bus routes and “eschewing mountain refuges for the sort of small Alpine hotel you usually see on cuckoo clocks”.

    Canyoning and diving, Portugal
    Madeira is an “unsung paradise” for adventure seekers, said Euronews. Diving is the best way to explore the reefs, caves and volcanic rock formations, and the archipelago also offers an abundance of other outdoor activities. The three-and-a-half-hour “Pico to Pico” trail, scaling two mountains, is one of the highlights.

    See more

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    £192 million: The amount spent on the ongoing Covid-19 Inquiry, which in just three years has overtaken the 12-year Bloody Sunday Inquiry as the most expensive in British history. According to newly published financial reports, £110.8 million has been spent on lawyers, £26.3 million on “operational” costs – including IT systems and stationery – and £717,000 on travel, food and drink for inquiry staff.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today’s best commentary

    Will the new Planning Bill get Britain building?
    James Clark in City A.M.
    Britain’s planning system is plagued by “nervousness, delays and complex rules”, writes planning lawyer James Clark. The reforms in the Planning and Infrastructure Bill are “broadly welcomed”, but any further “legislative changes”, even “positive” ones, could “stall development rather than accelerate it”.  If “implemented well”, the current reforms “could reduce complexity and speed up delivery”, but “the system needs time to bed down” to avoid the risk of “paralysis”.

    Yes, Keir Starmer is Britain’s most unpopular PM ever. That could liberate him
    Polly Toynbee in The Guardian
    “What hell is the life of politics,” writes Polly Toynbee. Keir Starmer is our “most unpopular prime minister ever”, despite being a “decent, serious man of good intentions, without undue arrogance or vanity”. His party’s “only hope lies in despair”: “assume they will be wiped out”, whatever happens, and “use this massive majority for four more years” to do “what they think most right and fair”, rather than trying to woo the “Daily Mail-inflected right”.

    I never went to university but I’d love to do a mad PhD
    Caitlin Moran in The Times
    I like hearing “what actually goes on” at university, writes Caitlin Moran, “not least because I didn’t go”. There’s often some “tutting report” criticising grants for PhDs on “lesbian canal boaters” or “queer fat activism”. Back in 1905, “people were outraged women were studying medicine”. But debates on what’s worth studying always conclude that young people “are into mad shit” that some older people don’t value. Not me: I’d “love to read about” lesbian boat-dwelling.

     
     
    word of the day

    Bollie

    Short for “Bollinger”. The French champagne house is fizzing mad over a tongue-in-cheek social media advert by a small English winemaker that described its sparkling rosé as “none of the same old Bollie”. Bollinger accused Folc, which has just six staff, of “denigrating” its brand, but the Kent-based firm’s founder Thomas Cannon said the line was “simply intended to add a bit of British wit”.

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Harriet Marsden, Rebecca Messina, Chas Newkey-Burden, Elliott Goat, Will Barker, Justin Klawans, David Edwards, Helen Brown and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations from Stephen Kelly.

    Image credits, from top: illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images; Alishia Abodunde / Getty Images; AFP / Getty Images; Mauro Pimentel / AFP / Getty Images; Sean Gallup / Getty Images

    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

    Recent editions

    • Evening Review

      ICE’s fast-tracked recruits

    • Morning Report

      Trump taxes Canada over Reagan rebuttal

    • Sunday Shortlist

      Panic mode

    VIEW ALL
    TheWeek
    • About Us
    • Contact Future's experts
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookie Policy
    • Advertise With Us
    • FAQ
    Add as a preferred source on Google

    The Week is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

    © Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.