The Sunday Guardian

DELHI POLICE HUNT FOR 3,000 PRISONERS WHO JUMPED COVID PAROLE, BAIL

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keeping in view the pandemic started in the second week of April 2020. Around 5,500 undertrial­s were released on interim bail, while 1,184 convicts were released on emergency parole. In March 2021, they were asked by the respective courts to surrender, but many haven’t reported back to the jail authoritie­s.

“The police headquarte­rs was not in favour of releasing the inmates as many of them are repeat offenders and we thought that they would get involved in criminal activities once again; our apprehensi­ons came true as many of them went on to join criminal gangs and are indulging in offences,” a senior Delhi police officer told The Sunday Guardian. “We are seeing an increase in crime rate because of this, while many of them have moved to other states and it’s difficult to trace them now,” he added.

In Delhi, the whole exercise of releasing prisoners started when more than 300 inmates and 180 staff members got infected with Covid-19 in different jails. The Delhi government set up a high-powered committee after the Supreme Court suggested that state government­s should release prisoners in view of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The local police stations to which the prisoners belong are carrying out surprise searches at their addresses and using technical surveillan­ce, hoping to catch them. Jail authoritie­s are also checking records as it is possible that some of the undertrial­s might have been given regular bail by the courts concerned. Every inmate, who returns to the prison, undergoes a mandatory rapid antigen Covid test. They are sent on a 10day quarantine at a specially designed prison near the Mandoli jail, irrespecti­ve of the test result. With a total capacity of around 10,000 inmates, Tihar in Delhi is one of the largest jails in the world.

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