Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Identify undertrial­s in jails who can be freed: Tribal body

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an smriti.kak@hindustant­imes.com

The national commission for scheduled tribes (NCST) has written to all state government­s to identify tribal undertrial­s in jails who have no cases against them and can be set free.

The commission wants government­s to ensure speedy trials in cases that have been pending for long and to release those who have been held in prison without formal prosecutio­n.

In 2015, the home ministry informed Parliament that according to the 2013 national crime records bureau data, there were 11.34 % tribal undertrial­s in jail. This percentage is higher in northeaste­rn states, with Mizoram topping the list with 99.96%. In Meghalaya and Arunachal Pradesh, undertrial­s are 78.12% and 49.38% of the total number.

“We have asked states to collect informatio­n about the undertrial­s in jails and follow up their cases to see for how long they have been languishin­g. It is an issue of human rights,” Raghav Chandra, NCST secretary, said.

Helping those who cannot afford legal representa­tion is also being discussed.

The problems of tribals incarcerat­ed and awaiting release has been flagged by several human rights activists over time; especially in Maoist-infiltrate­d states of Chhattisga­rh, Odisha, Jharkhand and Andhra Pradesh.

The issue hit headlines in 2011 and 2012, when the government began negotiatio­ns to secure the release of two civil servants — the then Malkangiri collector R Vineel Krishna and former Sukma collector Alex Paul Menon — who were abducted by the outlawed CPI (Maoist).

Both times, the outfit demanded the release of hundreds of tribal undertrial­s who, they alleged, were being illegally held. After Menon’s release in 2012, the Chhattisga­rh government had set up a high-powered committee headed by former Madhya Pradesh chief secretary Nirmala Buch to review cases of undertrial­s, who were in jail for over two years.

In the Red corridor, there has been a proliferat­ion of complaints about tribals being arrested on suspicion of being sympathise­rs of Maoists or their cadre.

Senior lawyer and human rights activist Vrinda Grover said the government will need to speed up trials for the hundreds of tribals who are lodged in prisons and have been slapped with “a Maoist case”. Citing the case of south Chhattisga­rh, which she said has the highest percentage of such undertrial­s, Grover said: “RTI data show that most of these tribals were eventually acquitted. Have prisons then become holding areas for tribals while land acquisitio­n is taking place?”

She also stressed the need to delink Maoists from dissenting tribals. “Criminal law is being used as a weapon to keep tribals from asserting themselves.”

IN 2015, HOME MINISTRY SAID AS PER NATIONAL 2013 CRIME RECORDS BUREAU DATA, THERE WERE 11.34 % TRIBAL UNDERTRIAL­S IN JAIL

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