Hindustan Times (Noida)

Measures fall short as Covid enters all three jails in Delhi

- Prawesh Lama ■ prawesh.lama@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: A string of measures — ban on biweekly visits from family members, segregatio­n of new inmates to an isolated jail for the first 14 days and holding court proceeding­s through video conference from within the prison — has not been able to prevent the Covid-19 virus from creeping in to all three jail complexes in Delhi — Tihar, Rohini and Mandoli.

Till Monday evening, the three complexes, which house a total of 14,000 prisoners and around 1,800 jail officers, had reported 20 cases among prisoners and staffers.

NEW DELHI: A string of measures — ban on biweekly visits from family members, segregatio­n of new inmates to an isolated jail for the first 14 days and holding court proceeding­s through video conference from within the prison — has not been able to prevent the Covid-19 virus from creeping in to all three jail complexes in Delhi — Tihar, Rohini and Mandoli.

Till Monday evening, the three complexes, which house 14,000 prisoners and around 1,800 officers, reported 20 cases among prisoners and staffers.

Senior prison officers said contact tracing so far has revealed that in all the three jails, the virus reached the prison through asymptomat­ic jail officers.

At least 17 families living in separate flats at the Tihar residentia­l complex, located behind the jail, have been told to go into self isolation for 14 days.

“In at least 17 flats, the officers are in self-isolation. Around 60 people in those flats are in home isolation. The officials in Tihar and Rohini jail, who were infected with the virus, were both residents of Tihar quarters. Only Mandoli deputy superinten­dent, who tested positive lived somewhere else,” said a prison officer on anonymity.

Prison officers also said that barring the case of the Mandoli officer, all the cases were asymptomat­ic. The officials fear that many more inside the prison may be infected with the virus and have ordered all jail superinten­dents to ensure that both prisoners and jail officers follow social distancing norms strictly.

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