Court asks Tihar jail to release 600 petty offenders

By IANS

New Delhi : The Delhi High Court Monday directed Tihar jail authorities to release 600 inmates, held for minor offences like breach of peace and languishing in jail owing to their failure to furnish surety to be released on bail.


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A division bench of Justice Pradeep Nandarajog and Justice P.K. Bhasin ordered the release saying, "All 600 inmates in Tihar Central jail, jailed under Section 107 (breach of peace) and 151 (preventive arrest to check commission of cognisable offences) of the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC) due to non-furnishing of surety, would be released on furnishing a personal bond of Rs.2,000 each."

The court ordered the release after going through a report of a three-member committee appointed by it to probe into the spate of recent deaths during peak of summer.

The Tihar jail had recently been rocked by death of six prisoners and one jail warder in seven days, beginning June 6. The jail authorities had instituted mandatory magisterial probe into all the deaths, while maintaining that they all had died of natural causes, including heat stroke.

The committee, in its report to the court said that recent deaths in jails happened due to overcrowding and lack of proper civic amenities, including scarcity of drinking water.

The high court directed the district magistrates to complete the hearing of such cases in six months.

While reprimanding the Jail authorities for their failure to provide various civic amenities in jail, the court said fans and coolers should have been fixed in the jails before the onset of summer.

The high court had directed the Delhi Government and Tihar jail authorities on June 13 to file a report within two days stating the reasons for the death of six inmates in one week.

The court had observed that it seemed that basic minimum amenities were not provided to them in the jail, which had more than 10,000 inmates.

Shalek Chand Jain, a social worker, alleged in a public suit that deaths in the Asia's largest jail have become routine.

"In the past one week at least six people died due to excessive heat," said the petition filed by counsel Sugriv Dubey.

"The atrocities of the police is an open secret to the public and the innocent people are nabbed under the sections 107 and 151 of the CrPC on false charges for causing breach of peace and sent to jail even though the offence is bailable. The people are kept in judicial custody as the police does not want to relent," alleged the petition.

While seeking direction to the authorities to improve the conditions in the jails, the petitioner also asked for the institution of a judicial inquiry to unravel the causes of the deaths of so many innocent people during summer.

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