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Price of soy shots: Fighting in women’s prison when boss pulls tofu from menu

A woman’s prison in the UK saw violence being taken out of the menu at the same time by tofu.

HMP Eastwood Park in Gloucestershire has “increased” attacks on employees, combat and bullying after prisons ceased to serve tofu.

According to an official report, the increased liability is attributed to factors including “unmet expert dietary needs.”

Tofu is to extract soy milk from soybeans, then turn the soy milk into curds, and then press them into pieces. It is the tofu component.

It has been removed from the prison menu The governor is working to provide three meals, with a budget of £3 per person.

Although unusable, the prison – the location of 440 women – began to win the “a atmosphere of resentment”.

Since then, many prisoners have requestedOFU can be brought back in a food consultation meeting with the prison boss.

However, the Independent Monitoring Committee report said that opening the prisons to “nurtured and healthy diet” at £3.01 a day is a “challenge”.

HMP Eastwood Park in Gloucestershire ‘increased’ attacks on employees, combat and bullying after prisons cease service tofu

According to an official report, the increase in violence in prisons is attributed to factors including “unmet expert dietary needs”

According to an official report, the increase in violence in prisons is attributed to factors including “unmet expert dietary needs”

Although not available, HMP Eastwood Park (pictured as the location of 440 women) began to gain an

Although not available, HMP Eastwood Park (pictured as the location of 440 women) began to gain an “emotion of resentment.”

About 40% of inmates say they don’t feel they don’t have enough food and most food isn’t “healthy”.

The report, see Mirroradded that some people have also posted written complaints about available food.

It noted: “The problems range from the quality of meals and unmet professional dietary needs. Some foods required, such as tofu, cannot be used.

Other causes of increased violence include going beyond the cell, inmates’ ability to use the gym, lost property, and contact time with doctors and dentists.

The report said staff were said to be “stretched and exhausted, resulting in a downturn in morale”, which also suggests that the number of employees using force has doubled over the past year, from 517 to 1,039.

“The prisons are very aware of the need to reduce the use of UOF events and allocate a large number of resources to determine causes, staff training and culture change. Eastwood Park still has some of the highest UOF numbers in women’s estates,” the report added.

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