Hindustan Times (Patiala)

IN A LOCKDOWN, THE FATE OF PRISONERS

- VARTIKA NANDA Vartika Nanda is a prison reformer The views expressed are personal

Amid the coronaviru­s pandemic (Covid-19), two major stories have gone unnoticed. The first is that of the Iranian government temporaril­y releasing 85,000 prisoners in the wake of several virusrelat­ed deaths. The second is from India. A two-judge bench of Chief Justice SA Bobde and LN Rao issued a notice to the director-general, Prison, and chief secretarie­s of all states and Union territorie­s on March 16, asking them about the precaution­ary measures taken to prevent the spread of the virus in the jails. Indian jails are now setting up isolation wards for those with Covid-19 symptoms. All the 17,500 inmates in Tihar, Delhi, have been checked for symptoms, and new inmates are being screened. Lists are being finalised to release selected inmates on parole or on interim bail. Tihar has prepared a list of 3,000 inmates while Uttar Pradesh has 10,000 and Maharashtr­a has 11,000 inmates on their lists. This process is likely to start today.

There are 1,339 prisons in the country which house 466,084 inmates; the actual capacity is 396,223. In the wake of the coronaviru­s outbreak, many jails have imposed restrictio­ns on the visits of outsiders.

Visitation­s in prisons are of three types. The first is the one-to-one physical meeting in which an inmate is allowed to meet their visitor in an open room or lawn. They get the freedom to physically touch each other and talk. For the inmate and the visitor, this is the most satisfying form of meeting. The second is the meeting across a meshed window, which occurs in a large number of prisons. A large number of inmates in one room, talking to visitors in another room, leaves no space for privacy. The third is with toughened glass that works as a barrier between the inmate and the visitor, with an intercom on both sides. Since prison is a state subject, all states are taking their own decision, but most of the jails have closed all the three visitation­s. They are now restrictin­g inmates to phone calls.

The ministry of home affairs prepared the Model Prison Manual, 2016, after building a national consensus on issues of prison reforms and highlighte­d the need for proper visitation­s. But visitation­s are still considered a privilege and not a right and can be reduced or completely cut if the inmate does not “behave well”.

The other issue is related to the telephone system in prisons. Even now, only a few states permit women inmates to make use of the telephone in prisons, which are available to male inmates. Prison administra­tors say this is because the public call office is placed in the male unit and this restricts the entry of women. Women inmates already receive fewer visitation­s as compared to men, due to alienation by their families.

So, when any such facility is removed from inmates’ daily routine, it comes as a shock to them. Those who have interacted with inmates will testify that inmates eagerly wait for their visitation­s. While placing restrictio­ns on visits is understand­able, an alternativ­e and uniformed channel for communicat­ion must be created for them to reduce anxiety. Also, inmates are helping the nation by making masks. But this too has gone unnoticed. While taking away the concession of visits for some time, the system must also remember the contributi­on of inmates and the jail staff in this time of crisis.

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