Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘Stop issuing advisories on undertrial­s’

SC ADOPTS TOUGH STAND

- Bhadra Sinha bhadra.sinha@hindustant­imes.com

The Supreme Court asked the Centre on Tuesday to stop issuing advisories to states on undertrial prisoners if the latter were ignoring them.

The bench headed by justice MB Lokur made the stern remark when the government said it was helpless if the states were not following its advice on the release of undertrial­s to reduce crowding of jails. “In that event you stop advising the states if they are not listening to you. If your advice is not worth a while, then it’s better not to give it,” the court said, hearing a PIL to improve living conditions for prisoners in jail.

The court was astonished to read details furnished on undertrial­s by National Legal Services Authority (NALSA), which said prisoners continue to languish in jails despite the state legal serviries. The apex court came down on the Centre while hearing a

PIL to improve living conditions for prisoners in jail

When the government said it was helpless if the states were not following its advice on the release of undertrial­s to reduce crowding, the court said ‘if your advice is not worth a while, then it’s better not to give it’

ces authoritie­s and Undertrial Review Commission (URC) recommendi­ng their release. “There are around 2,000 such prisoners. If the state authoritie­s are not releasing them, it is a violation of their fundamenta­l right under Article 21 that entitles them to liberty,” the bench told Attorney General KK Venugopal.

Justice Lokur read out the contents Around 2,000 prisoners continue to languish in jails despite the state legal services authoritie­s and Undertrial Review Commission recommendi­ng their release

The court asked the chief secretarie­s of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtr­a to file an affidavit on the status of undertrial­s in jails.

of NALSA to point out that in some instances, undertrial­s released were more than the recommenda­tion. “In Assam, the URC identified 46 but 67 prisoners were released. Similarly in Uttar Pradesh, URC approved 228 names whereas 269 were let out,” the judge said.

On his part, the AG said the Centre could only issue adviso- To make the states act upon it, the court must issue a notice to the chief secretary and seek an explanatio­n on why the prisoners were not released, Venugopal submitted. “We did what is under our jurisdicti­on. Advisories were issued since you (court) asked us to do so. For more effective process, the court should not ask the Union of India to do something outside their legislativ­e competence,” Venugopal said, asking the court to take stringent action if states are unable to give a satisfacto­ry reply.

On the AG’s suggestion the court asked the chief secretarie­s of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtr­a to file an affidavit on the status of undertrial­s in jails.

Fixing October 25 as the deadline for the same, the court said it would be compelled to summon them personally if there was a failure to comply with the order.

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