FIES (Ficheros de Internos de Especial Seguimiento, meaning "Files of Inmates under Special Monitoring") is a restrictive Spanish prison regime which involves 22 hours of solitary confinement every day. After first being imposed on those convicted of terrorism or membership of armed groups such as ETA, it was extended to particularly violent prisoners and major drug traffickers. FIES has been criticised for being applied to prisoners who have not committed offences covered by the regime.
Regime
The FIES regime (Ficheros de Internos de Especial Seguimiento, meaning "Files of Inmates under Special Monitoring") places prisoners into a restrictive system which involves 22 hours of solitary confinement every day, monitoring of all communications without judicial oversight and frequent changes of both cell and prison.[1] FIES was first mentioned in 1989 in a circular which advised placing prisoners who were convicted of terrorism or membership of armed groups into the regime; two years later it was extended to include particularly violent prisoners and major drug traffickers. Under FIES, all details about the prisoner's existence and interactions are recorded.[2] In 2002, the United NationsCommittee Against Torture criticised FIES and the Supreme Court of Spain modified the regime in 2009. As of 2021, it covered five categories, namely: FIES-1 CD (Direct Control); FIES-2 DO (Organized Delinquency); FIES-3 BA (Armed Groups), FIES-4 FS (Security); FIES-5 CE (Special Characteristics).[2]
The first prison to use the FIES regime was in Badajoz and Patxi Zamoro was the first FIES inmate.[3][1]AnarchistXosé Tarrío González [es] wrote a book about his incarceration entitled Huye, hombre, huye: diario de un prisono FIES (Flee, man, flee: diary of a FIES prisoner);[3] he died in the FIES unit at Coruna in 2005.[4]Insurrectionary anarchistGabriel Pombo da Silva escaped from a FIES unit in 2004 before being re-arrested and put back in the regime in 2020, under the FIES-5 category.[4][3] Other prisoners such as Jose Antonio Cano have killed themselves whilst incarcerated.[4] In 2018, there were prisoners held under the FIES regime at A Lama prison [es] and Puerto III, the high security section of Puerto de Santa María prison [es].[5]
FIES has been criticised for being applied to prisoners who have not committed offences covered by the regime. For example, Vladimir Kokorev, Yulia Maleeva and their son Igor were arrested on an Interpol notice in Panama in 2015, on suspicion of money laundering on behalf of Teodoro Obiang, President of Equatorial Guinea. They were extradited to Spain and held in pre-trial detention in a prison on the Canary Islands under the FIES regime, without any charge being made against them. In 2019, their lawyer took their case to the European Court of Human Rights.[6][7] In another case, the non-governmental organisation Fair Trials noted that ten young people were arrested after a bar fight with two off-duty police officers in Alsasua, in the province of Navarre. Three were held for eighteen months in pre-trial detention under the FIES regime before being convicted on charges not related to terrorism.[6][8]
^ abRonco, Daniela; Sbraccia, Alvise; Torrente, Giovanni (2019). Prison de-radicalization strategies, programs and risk assessment tools in Europe. European Prison Observatory. p. 19. ISBN978-88-98688-29-6.