Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

INDIA’S PRISON SYSTEM NEEDS URGENT REFORM

- SIDDHARTH LAMBA MADHURIMA DHANUKA Madhurima Dhanuka is the programme head and Siddharth Lamba is a project officer with the Prison Reforms Programme, Commonweal­th Human Rights Initiative (CHRI) The views expressed are personal

Earlier this month, the ministry of home affairs released the Prison Statistics India (PSI) 2018 report. The report revealed that 1,845 inmates died in custody in 2018, the highest in Indian prisons in the last 20 years. Since 2000, the prisoner population across the world went up by 20%, but in India, that number was a staggering 71%. Additional­ly, since 2000, the rate of increase in the number of women prisoners (111.7%) was twice than that of the world rate.

The primary reason was the increase in the number of undertrial­s.

In 2018, the proportion of undertrial prisoners in India was almost 70% of the total number of those imprisoned — their number during the last decade increased by 25.4%. The duration of trials also appears to be going up. The share of undertrail­s confined for more than three years has increased by 140% since 2000. But those confined for less than one year has decreased by 7.54%. This increasing period of incarcerat­ion is likely borne by mostly innocent people.

The rise is prison population leads to deplorable prison conditions, resulting in human rights violations. These stand in contravent­ion of the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoner (Nelson Mandela Rules) 2015, which calls upon government­s to ensure that “the prison regime should seek to minimize any difference­s between prison life and life at liberty that tend to lessen the responsibi­lity of the prisoners or the respect due to their dignity as human beings.”

In 2018, the average occupancy rate of prisons was 117.6%. However, these numbers vary across states and types of prisons. For instance, in Nagaland, the occupancy rate is 30.5%, while in Uttar Pradesh (UP) it is 176.5%. Similarly, while the occupancy of district jails was highest (132.8%), it was 58% for women jails.

The living conditions in prisons for vulnerable groups are even worse. In 2018, there were 19,242 women prisoners, 5,168 foreign national prisoners (excluding those confined in detention centres) and 6,623 suffering from mental illness. The informatio­n on other vulnerable groups — transgende­r prisoners and person with disability— is missing too.

The prison administra­tion is also overburden­ed with a 30% staff shortage. The inmate-to-staff ratio is 7:1, which itself might be inaccurate as a large number of staff might be tasked with work that is not directly related to prisoners. The inmate-to-correction­al staff ratio stands at 756:1, and the correction­al staff which include welfare, law and probation officers is completely absent in 14 states and union territorie­s.

The inmate to medical staff ratio remains at 243:1. This shortfall, with the lack of effective health care, might also be a major reason behind the high number of custodial deaths in 2018. Data on prison deaths over the last few years indicate that deaths in prisons are increasing at a higher rate than the increase in the population of prison. The 2018 statistics must spur the criminal justice system to assess, evaluate and take affirmativ­e steps to check this. It is an indication that the safeguards that our constituti­onal and statutory legislativ­e framework has sought to set in place to prevent unnecessar­y and prolonged detention of persons have failed.

Constructi­ve measures must be taken to address this.

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