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‘I’m so desperate to be freed from prison that I’ve renounced my British citizenship’
United Kingdom🏛️ Politics5 hr. ago

‘I’m so desperate to be freed from prison that I’ve renounced my British citizenship’

Nicholas Bidar, a 38-year-old man imprisoned under an abolished indefinite jail term (IPP), has renounced his British citizenship and is seeking deportation to Egypt as his 'only hope' of freedom. He has spent over 17 years in prison—nearly ten years beyond his original minimum tariff—and remains in a maximum-security facility despite the Parole Board recommending he be moved to open conditions. Bidar claims he is no longer a threat to the public and has accepted responsibility for past crimes. The IPP sentences, introduced in 2003 and abolished in 2012, have left thousands of prisoners without a set release date, leading to criticism and reports of psychological harm. Although the Parole Board urged the Ministry of Justice to act, Bidar remains detained, facing potential statelessness if deportation is denied.

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1 reports

The Independent logoThe IndependentIndependentCenterFactual 85Objective 655 hr. ago
‘I’m so desperate to be freed from prison that I’ve renounced my British citizenship’

Nicholas Bidar, a 38-year-old man imprisoned under an abolished indefinite jail term (IPP), has renounced his British citizenship and is seeking deportation to Egypt as his 'only hope' of freedom. He has spent over 17 years in prison—nearly ten years beyond his original minimum tariff—and remains in a maximum-security facility despite the Parole Board recommending he be moved to open conditions. Bidar claims he is no longer a threat to the public and has accepted responsibility for past crimes. The IPP sentences, introduced in 2003 and abolished in 2012, have left thousands of prisoners without a set release date, leading to criticism and reports of psychological harm. Although the Parole Board urged the Ministry of Justice to act, Bidar remains detained, facing potential statelessness if deportation is denied.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the situation of Nicholas Bidar objectively, quoting his statements and referencing the Parole Board's recommendations and criticisms of the IPP system. It does not exhibit overtly biased language or selective sourcing. The framing appears balanced, covering both Bidar's appeal,

Why these scores (Factual 85 · Objective 65): Factuality is high as the article accurately reports Nicholas Bidar's situation, including his IPP sentence, his renouncement of citizenship, and the TERS scheme. Objectivity is lower due to emotionally charged language like 'desperate' and 'trapped in indefinite detention,' which may bias the reade

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