New bill to initiate prison reform soon
George Iype in New Delhi
A new draft Bill on prison reform being finalised by India's
home ministry has advocated humane treatment and protection of
prisoners lodged in various jails across the country.
The legislation -- the Indian Prison Bill -- will replace the century-old
Indian Prison Act, 1894 which human rights experts say is unsuited to
cater to the modern requirements of purposeful custody,
reformation and treatment of prisoners.
Home ministry sources said the National Human Rights Commission,
which has been entrusted with the task of preparing the IPB, will
submit it to the government shortly so that it can be introduced
in the ongoing Budget session of Parliament.
A home ministry official told Rediff On The NeT that the government
wants the IPB to be passed in Parliament as early as possible
to ward off international criticism that there is gross violation
of human rights in India's jails. Apex human rights watchdogs
like Amnesty International and Asia Watch have often accused the
Indian government of neglecting thousands of prisoners lodged
in various jails.
In 1995-96, the NHRC received as many as
11,472 complaints of human rights violations from prisoners, jails,
sub-jails and lock-ups from across the country.
NHRC records say there were 444 cases of custodial
deaths and rapes that year.
The draft bill deals with a number of pressing problems
that plague nearly 50 major prisons and hundreds of jails
across the country.
Saying that human rights violations and sexual exploitation including
rape of women and juveniles in jails are frequent incidents in
Indian jails, the IPB calls for special accommodation facilities
for them.
The Bill says the overcrowding of prisons is caused by the
presence of undertrials. It, therefore, urges the government
to expedite the disposal of cases against undertrials pending
in criminal courts all over the country.
It bars the jail authorities from lodging juveniles along with
adults and seasoned criminals in prisons.
Other salient features of the Bill are measures to tackle the inadequate daily
diet of prisoners, drafting a national
law regarding the premature release of prisoners and imparting
vocational training facilities for the rehabiliation of criminals.
The Bill says the federal government should 'standardise the overall
approach towards prison administration all the over the country
by providing a framework for ensuring essential features commonly
applicable to all states.'
In an effort to garner an all-India support for the Bill, NHRC chairperson
Justice M N Venkatachaliah has written to all state chief
ministers urging them to authorise the home ministry to introduce
the legislation in Parliament.
Ministry sources said the approval of two or more state governments
is necessary to enact the IPB as it is a central law which will
be binding on all state prisons.
The government is also preparing a new Jail Manual along with the
IPB to be distributed to prisons across the country. Ministry
officials said the IPB and the new Jail Manual will largely
follows the guidelines established by the United Nations standard minimum
rules for the treatment of prisoners, 1957.
The Jail Manual says the state of prisons in India is generally
marked by gross over-crowding, squalor and maladministration,
'Suffice to say that the ills of our jails, sub-jails and lock-ups
cry out for reform', it points out.
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