Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Lalu Prasad getsvip treatment in Ranchi jail Rabri may lead, no announceme­nt yet

THE VIP PRISONER

- B Vijay Murty/bedanti Saran Anirban Guha Roy and B Vijay Murty

RANCHI: He might be prisoner number 3312 in the Birsa Munda Central Jail records, but convicted Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Lalu Prasad is a VIP prisoner and he is getting all the amenities due to such prisoners as laid down by the jail manual.

Longer visiting hours in comparison with regular inmates, an upper division cell with a TV and two cooks, a generous supply of rice, fresh vegetables, mutton/ chicken or fish, ghee, and seasonal fruits and the option of getting food from outside, are just some of the entitlemen­ts.

After a CBI court in Ranchi convicted Lalu in a 17-year-old fodder scam case on Monday, the former Bihar chief minister faces a jail term of three to seven years.

The VIP prisoner can also get the reading material of his choice —newspapers, books and magazines — pending approval of the jail superinten­dent. And in fact, on Tuesday, when senior RJD parliament­arian Raghuvansh Prasad Singh dropped by to visit Lalu he gifted him a copy of the Bhagavad Gita. “I have advised him to read the book. Mahatma Gandhi used to keep the Gita with him all the time. By the time Lalu is halfway through it he will be released from jail.”

After the routine headcount in the morning and the evening, when the prisoners have to return to their barracks and cells, a VIP prisoner is also allowed to roam around in the prison premises for an extra hour.

According to Jharkhand IG Prisons, Shailendra Bushan, the status of VIP prisoners is accorded to a former union cabinet minister, minister of state, member of parliament (MP), member of state legislator, former vidhan sabha speakers/ deputy speakers, sitting MPS/MLAS, and those authorised by the judicial and executive magistrate­s. PATNA/RANCHI: Dynastic politics have come to stay – and the RJD is no exception. With party chief Lalu Prasad in jail, his wife Rabr Devi is set to lead the party with son Tejaswi. But for now, there is no move to formalise the arrange ment, which appears to be the only way to keep the fragile peace with in the party.

Prasad’s decision to hand over the party’s reins to Rabri, instead of a core committee, had ruffled the feathers of senior leaders Striking a defensive note, Rabr said, “Family rule is a common practice in all parties. But we are not keen on any post”.

A section insists on collective leadership, maintainin­g that Prasad’s sons are too young to handle the party. Others look to Prasad for leadership, since “the biggest challenge now is to keep the party intact”. At least 50 senior RJD leaders have visited Prasad since he was lodged in jail.

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