Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

BARRINGONE MEET THE LONELIEST PRISONER IN INDIA

- Dipanjan Sinha

Deepak Kanji is alone in a room for 20, with a TV, blanket, water container and 50 sq metres of empty space. The 30-year-old is the only inmate of Diu’s only jail. After the undertrial moves out, the prison will shut and management of the 472-year-old Portuguese-built fortificat­ion will revert to the Archaeolog­ical Survey of India (ASI).

For now, Kanji must make do with two hours of fresh air and cop company between 4 pm and 6 pm. At night, he lies alone in his room surrounded by vacant watchtower­s. The staff has been pared down, but even at its minimum, there are still five jail guards and an assistant jailer for a facility housing one.

“They serve in shifts and the inmate is guarded 24x7, but the situation has its challenges,” says Chandrahas Vaja, who is in charge of the jail. “We cannot arrange for any real activity for the prisoner as he is the only one. For his food we have made a special arrangemen­t with a restaurant near the fort.”

The process of shutting the jail was sanctioned in 2013, after the ASI put in a request saying it wanted to promote tourism at the site. But it was only a year ago that the actual shutdown began.

“We decided to gradually empty the prison, by not taking in any more people. At the time there were seven inmates, two of them women,” says Vaja.

Four of the seven were transferre­d to a prison in Amreli, Gujarat, about 100 km away;two did their time and were released. Kanji remained, arrested in December for allegedly trying to poison his wife. If convicted, he will be transferre­d to Amreli too.

“It is convenient to keep him here while he is an undertrial because his hearings are at the Diu sessions court,” Vaja says.

THEN & NOW

The fort is a moody, evocative reminder of Portuguese rule. Diu was a colony from 1537 to 1961 and this jail is one of the oldest functionin­g prisons in the country.

The structure is situated on the extreme south-east point of the island. Inside, rows of cells stand empty, the barred doors still locked. A huge kitchen and bakery gather cobwebs. Outside, stone pathways lead to half-buried arches and a sunken tank, now dry and cracked.

ASI officials say it’s not clear if this part of the fort was always a jail; the bakery suggests it may not have been, says a senior conservato­r. But it was a functional

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