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Fifty-four years in jail without trial: the plight of prison
inmates in India
By Parwini Zora
26 August 2005
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Machang Lalung, aged 77, was released from incarceration last
month in the northeast Indian state of Assam after spending more
than half a century behind bars awaiting trial.
Lalung had been arrested at his home village of Silsang in
1951 under section 326 of the Indian Penal Code for causing
grievous harm. According to civil rights groups who have
investigated Lalungs case, there was no substantive evidence
to support the charge against him. In any event, those found guilty
of this offence typically receive sentences of no more than 10
years imprisonment.
Less than a year after he was taken into custody, Lalung was
transferred to a psychiatric hospital in the Assamese town of
Tezpur. Sixteen years later, in 1967, doctors confirmed that he
was fully fit to be released, but instead he was transferred
to Guwahati Central Jail, where he was imprisoned until this summer.
It seems the police just forgot about him thereafter,
Assamese human rights activist Sanjay Borbora told the BBC. Borbora
was among those who brought Machangs case to the attention
of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC). As a result of
the Commissions intervention and other protests, Lalungs
case was finally heard and he was released after paying a token
bond of one Indian rupee.
He is a simple villager and his life has been destroyed
by a cruel system. He should sue the authorities for millions
of rupees, but I do not think he is even aware he could do it,
said Borbora.
According to a Scotsman.com news report, the NHRC has
taken up the cases of four other men awaiting trial in Assam:
Khalilur Rehman has been in custody for 35 years, Anil Kumar Burman
for 33 years, and Sonamani Deb for 32 years, while Parbati Mallik
has been detained in a psychiatric unit for 32 years.
Though these individual cases have now gained media attention,
the phenomenon of accused persons having to endure unconscionable
delays awaiting trial is the norm in the Indian justice system.
In 2002, some three quarters of all persons held in Indian prisons
had not been sentenced to jail, but were under trialthat
is, awaiting trial.
The largest number of under-trial or remand prisoners is to
be found in the jails of Uttar Pradesh, Manipur, and Meghalaya,
where more than 90 percent of the prison population have reportedly
not faced trial.
According to a National Crime Research Bureau (NCRB) study,
Crime in India 2002, nearly 220,000 cases took more than 3 years
to reach court, and about 25,600 exhausted 10 years before they
were completed. A staggering number of prison inmates awaiting
trial have already been imprisoned longer than the most rigorous
sentence that they could ever be given for the offence they are
alleged to have committed.
A long record of appalling conditions
Many of Indias prisons date back to the era of British
colonial rule, with thousands of prisoners kept in crumbling facilities
largely unchanged since the beginning of the last century. The
only major all-Indian prison reform ever implemented dates back
to the Indian Jails Committee of 1919-1920.
The Indian prison system perpetuates many of the injustices
of the penal system set up by the British. For example, inmates
of foreign origin or of high caste and social status are routinely
imprisoned under relatively better conditions and segregated from
those inmates who are poorer and of lower social position. Larger
or less-crowded cells, access to books and newspapers, and more
and better food are offered to those prisoners classified as Status
A prisoners.
Meanwhile, the poor and especially tribal and Dalit (ex-untouchable)
inmates are subject to various forms of abuse, ranging from the
denial of visitors and refusal to provide medical care, to prolonged
labor, sexual harassment, rape and concealed physical
and mental torture.
Our judicial and penal system in its actual working obviously
discriminates between the rich and the poor.... If you are poor
and have once landed in jailfor whatever reason or no reasonthe
probability of your being back in jail off and on is fairly high,
concluded Raman Nanda, who complied a prison investigation in
1981, one of the few sources of information available about the
Indian prison population.
Most of those who are nabbed by the police and are unable
to have themselves bailed out are the poor. Those with resources,
the big criminals, the smugglers, corrupt politicians, tax evaders
are people who are rarely caught. Thus our institutions penalise
not the violators of law but the poor, stated Nandas
study.
In the 1980s, the All India Commission for Jail Reforms (The
Mulla Committee) found that the majority of the prison
population was from a rural and agricultural background
and that first offenders involved in technical or minor
violations of law accounted for a large number of prisoners.
Many inmates are imprisoned for non-payment of fines or an inability
to afford good legal representation.
Among the worst-affected groups are women with children and
the mentally ill. Female prisoners account for 3.12 percent of
the total jail population and are allowed to keep their children
until they reach the age of five. According to available statistics,
1,400 children younger than five are accompanying their mothers
in jails.
Last year, the Pakistan-based Dawn news site quoted
Zahira, a mother of two and woman prisoner in the Trihar prison,
as saying, Our fate depends on the mood of the wardens or
medical officer. I didnt have regular check-ups during my
pregnancy, which is against the rules. Irfan (her infant son)
was not weighed at birth. There are no cribs, baby food or warm
milk.
The absence of adequate psychiatric institutions and medical
services in India contributes to the large prison population.
Individuals with severe mental illnesses, branded as non-criminal
lunatics, are often imprisoned. With many mentally vulnerable
prisoners left to suffer without support in a brutal environment,
it is not surprising that there is a high rate of suicides of
prison inmates and police detainees. However, there is also evidence
that authorities term as suicides deaths that were caused by police
and jail guard abuse.
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) was created as
a statutory body in 1993 and has since periodically issued directions
about jail conditions. It suggested a prison reform bill in 1996,
but this has been ignored by various governments, including those
led by the Hindu-supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and
Congress and supported by the Left Front.
In fact, there is evidence that the situation facing Indias
prisoners is getting worse. At the end of 2002, there were 322,357
inmates in the jails of 26 States and 6 Union Territories, although
their authorised capacity was just 219,880, meaning there was
overcrowding, according to the governments own norms, of
46.6 percent.
The maximum overcrowding was recorded in the jails of Mizoram
(442 percent), followed by Jharkhand (260 percent), Delhi (211
percent), Haryana (165 percent), Andaman and Nicobar (139 percent)
and Chhatisgarh (115 percent). As compared to the previous year,
it was noted that jail overcrowding had increased in the states
of Delhi, Madhya Pradesh, Goa, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh and
the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
New Delhis Tihar Prison, also known as the Central
Jail, is said to be the worlds largest prison facility.
Although built to house 4,000 inmates, it currently holds 12,000,
80 percent of whom are awaiting trial.
Starting with the 1991 reforms, the Indian bourgeoisie has
been imposing rigorous cuts in education, health care, social
services and agricultural subsidies. The unprecedented social
devastation and growth of inequality that has resulted from the
policies of successive Indian governments have found partial expression
in the countrys growing crime rate. The police have responded
to this social crisis with frequent arbitrary round-ups in poor
areas and discrimination against socially vulnerable sections
of the working masses.
Rising number of custodial deaths and abuse
The police repression that has accompanied the past 14 years
of free-market economic reforms has caused Indias already
antiquated and overstretched prison system to descend into an
even greater state of chaos and human misery. According to Indian
Home Ministry records, deaths while in remand or custody increased
from 1,340 in 2002 to 1,462 by the end of 2003. According to an
NHRC report, a large proportion of the deaths in custody were
from natural and easily curable causes aggravated by poor prison
conditions. Tuberculosis caused many deaths, and HIV/AIDS remained
a serious health threat among prison inmates.
Non-governmental organisations that deal with prisoner abuse
allege that deaths in police custody, which occurred within hours
or days of initial detention, often implied violent abuse and
torture. The Home Ministry reported that there were 28,765 complaints
lodged against police for April 2003 for abuse including deaths.
In May of last year in Ambedkarnagar, Uttar Pradesh, police arrested
a daily labourer and tortured him when he failed to pay a Rs.
50,000 (US$1000) bribe. According to media reports, police admitted
the victim to the hospital under a false name after injecting
him in the rectum with petrol.
Police also threatened to harm his family if he reported the
incident. In July 2004, the NHRC requested a report from Punjabs
Inspector General of Prisons after a man incarcerated in Amritsars
Central Jail claimed the Deputy Superintendent and other prison
officials branded him on his back when he demanded water and better
treatment. Doctors found fresh scars on his back that had been
inflicted with hot iron rods. By years end, no action had
been taken.
The rape of persons in custody is also part of the broader
pattern of custodial abuse. Prisoner charities argue that rape
by police, including custodial rape, was more common than NHRC
figures indicate, since many rape incidents go unreported due
to the victims shame and fear of retribution.
A statement from the Asian Legal Resource Centre, on custodial
deaths and torture in India, handed to the National Human Rights
Commission and to the Sixty-first Session of the UN Commission
on Human Rights in Geneva, notes: Any person, who dares
to complain about police officers in India, faces the wrath of
the law enforcement agency.
Abhijnan Basu, who was serving his prison sentence at the Presidency
Jail, West Bengal, was one such person who was not so lucky. Officers
at the prison murdered him because he dared to complain about
the inhuman conditions and the poor quality of food. Three prison
wardens set him ablaze on November 12, 2004.
Torture in India is widespread, unaccounted for and rarely
prosecuted. It contributes to the state of anarchy and lawlessness
in many parts of the country. Torture is used as a cheap and easy
method of investigation and also as a tool for oppression. In
the hands of the wealthy and influential, Indian law enforcement
agencies have also strengthened links with criminal elements.
Even the judiciary in India cannot sever this nexus, between police
and criminals.
The state of Indias penal and justice systems speaks
volumes about the true nature of human rights and social equality
in a country routinely held up by the Western media as the worlds
largest democracy.
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