UK prisons to get 13,000 steel grilles to stop drone drug drops

11 June 2026 , 10:03
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UK prisons to get 13,000 steel grilles to stop drone drug drops
UK prisons to get 13,000 steel grilles to stop drone drug drops

Thousands of prison cell windows will be fitted with steel grilles to stop drones from flooding jails with drugs, weapons, and phones, the Government has announced.

The Ministry of Justice said up to 13,000 heavy-duty grilles – many manufactured by prisoners themselves – will be installed by spring next year, costing £35 million.

Prison governors have long reported that window improvements take years to complete due to a lack of funding.

The age and poor condition of some prisons make them especially vulnerable to drones, something the chief inspector of prisons has previously described as a threat to national security.

Around half of all prisoners had a drug problem as of April 2025, and easy access to substances is said to be crippling the Prison Service’s ability to maintain control.

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Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy said: “Drone smuggling fuels violence, debt, and disorder in our prisons. It wrecks rehabilitation and puts lives at risk.

“This new investment will further bolster prison defenses against drones, building on our work with police to catch and prosecute the criminal gangs responsible.

“To the criminal gangs using drones to target our prisons, my message is clear: we are shutting down your routes, disrupting your operations, and bringing offenders to justice.”

Tom Wheatley, president of the Prison Governors’ Association, said: “We have long warned of the threat to the security of our prisons and the safety of staff, prisoners, and the public arising from the ease with which drones can enter our prisons and deliver drugs, weapons, and mobile phones.

“We welcome this investment and the impact that it will have. Rehabilitation is far more difficult in prisons where drugs are rampant and violence is used to enforce debts.

“It is in all our interests to make conveying illicit and dangerous items into prisons as difficult as possible.”

one of the new grilles being installed

Earlier this year, a gang that used drones to smuggle drugs, weapons, and phones into Britain’s prisons in a system likened to Deliveroo and Uber Eats for inmates was jailed.

Shafaghatullah Mohseni, 29, orchestrated dozens of late-night and early-morning “drops” at prisons across London and the southeast of England between December 2, 2024, and February 26, 2025.

Hashim Al-Hussaini, 28, Mohammed Hamoud, 22, Faiz Salah, 29, Zahar Essaghi, 51, Mustafa Ibrahim, 30, and Emanuel Fisniku, 25, assisted Mohseni, acting as lookouts and drivers, as well as receiving payments for the illicit shipments.

Judge James Lofthouse said it was a “well-oiled conspiracy” which prison guards struggled to tackle – even if they had actually seen the drones making the drop-offs at cell windows.

Editorial Team

Thomas Brown

Head of Investigations

Ministry of Justice, Weapons, Prison, Organised Crime, Mobile phones, Drug trafficking, Drones

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