Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Quake-damaged jails force Nepal to free over 500 prisoners

- Utpal Parashar letters@hindustant­imes.com

Over 500 prisoners held in jails across Nepal were granted amnesty on the country’s Republic Day on Friday, a move prompted by damage caused to many prisons by last month’s devastatin­g earthquake.

On Thursday, the government recommende­d to Nepal President Ram Baran Yadav to grant amnesty to 541 prisoners who had not been convicted for heinous crimes and had served more than half of their sentence.

There is a tradition of granting amnesty to prisoners during important festivals like Dashain and Tihar and on Republic Day. This year’s Republic Day is not being celebrated due to the 7.9-magnitude temblor of April 25.

“The devastatin­g April 25 earthquake has damaged jails and some of the inmates have died in the quake. The damaged structures can’t be repaired immediatel­y,” said a circular from the home ministry to all prisons that sought names of prisoners for granting of amnesty. “The security of inmates has become a serious concern as aftershock­s are continuing and the rainy season is about to begin,” it said.

Those granted amnesty did not include prisoners convicted of serious crimes such as murder, rape, kidnapping, human traffickin­g and drug smuggling.

Sixteen prisoners held in the central jail in Kathmandu were killed and more than 90 others injured when a section of the building collapsed in the April 25 quake. Three of Nepal’s 74 prisons were destroyed by the temblor and 36 others damaged. Taking advantage of the situation, 220 prisoners had escaped.

One of them was top Indian Mujahideen operative Irfan Ahmad, who was later arrested in Uttar Pradesh.

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