Monday, December 13, 2010

[rti4empowerment] Re: [voiceofindiagroup] RTI & Jails in UP : Overcrowded Jails : Those having completed their term still languishing in jails

 

It's very sad that Indian bureaucracy has become a monster torturer. Under-trials suffer for years in jail without getting a trial date. People who have served their terms linger on in jails, because no body cares and bureaucracy wants bribe to release them. Where are human rights organizations? Why can't they raise their voices on such a cruel treatment of inmates?
Indian Human Rights Commission will rather spend its resources on chasing Narendra Modi on the instigation of phony Teesta Setalvad than take care of injustice meted out to citizens by red-tape of government officials, policemen, and the whole system. You can't buy a railway ticket in India without bribing somebody. Will it not be good if railway was private hands?
On my last visit to India, I wanted three AC-I ticket from Delhi to Gorakhpur. I was told that no tickets were available in two days, but a private shop behind the station went and obtained tickets for us but charged Rupees 2,000 each rather the normal fare of Rupees 1,300 each. Is this not human rights violation?
While I was in Patna, one old gentleman related to me that Bihar government officials will not sanction his hard-earned pension without bribes which he did not have. He retired five years ago and his family is in a miserable condition due to lack of income. Atrocities like this is common in India.
In criminal cases, police takes money from both sides and dumps the case unresolved. Police is totally inefficient and is corrupt to the bone. How much are our fellow Indians suffering due to this massive corruption and bureaucracy? Is this not a human rights issue?
While politicians are billionaires, have they cared for poor people. India is seized by phony politicians with hollow slogans. Nehru dynasty has ruled India for a long period of 60 years, and they have created a lot of internal and external problems for the country. Is this not time to throw these idiots out? At the time of Independence, Calcutta was the leading city in India, but now dust covers the city's roads, tram system is broken, and Maidan's landscaping and grass are gone. Basu succeeded in running industrialists out of West Bangal, Change Harrison Road to Ho Chi Minh Road and running American Consulate out of Bengal, Inviting Bangladeshis in mass and legitimizing them in mass who are terrorizing Hindu communities now, and increasing Communists' hooliganism in the state.
Laloo, in 15 years hooliganism, destroyed Bihar. Now Sonia and Rahul rule has engulfed India in such an unprecedented corruptions which were never seen before in the history of mankind. CBN runs on the orders from the government, and all cronies have filled the cabinet positions, governors, and Congress Party chief ministers. Sonia has even corrupted judiciary. Honest chief minister with an efficient administration of Gujarat are hounded by these criminals. So-called clean prime minister Man Mohan Singh is mired in multiple corruptions around him with his knowledge and sanctions.
Parliament terrorist Afzal Khan has been sitting in jail as a son-in-law of India for five years, but Sonia's foot-toucher Indian president will sanction his execution and is looking for Sonia's approval. Is Indian mind is a mind of servitude?
Are these acts not against Indian Constitution? Are these acts not unfair?  
R. Singh



From: urvashi sharma <rtimahilamanchup@gmail.com>
To: yaishwaryaj@gmail.com
Sent: Mon, December 13, 2010 6:12:42 AM
Subject: [voiceofindiagroup] RTI & Jails in UP : Overcrowded Jails : Those having completed their term still languishing in jails

 

http://www.thesundayindian.com/article.php?article_id=10461

Uttar Pradesh: Overcrowded Jails

Prisons in U.P. burst at the seams

Those having completed their term still languishing in jails

PUJA AWASTHI | December 5, 2010 14:04

Prisoners who have long completed their terms but have not been
released as yet form a considerable chunk of the total prisoners in
Uttar Pradesh's jails. This is one of the reasons behind overcrowding
of the state's jails, reveals an RTI query filed by Lucknow based
activist Urvashi Sharma.

Sharma, on October 4, 2009, had asked for the following information: A
list of all the jails in UP with their designated capacity and the
actual number of prisoners housed in each jail; jail-wise lists of the
names of all convicts who are serving time in spite of having
completed their terms; and details of the steps taken by the state
government in the last five years to scrutinise the status of all the
prisoners in UP jails, apart from certain other details.

The reply from the Jail Administration and Reforms Services was enough
to give Sharma a shock as she came to know that against the designated
capacity of 42,176 inmates, UP's 62 jails actually had 83,805
prisoners. According to a National Crimes Record Bureau (NCRB) report
on prisons, 2008, the state's jails have 191.6 per cent occupancy,
second only to Chattisgarh where the jail occupancy is 215.2 per cent.
According to the report, only 32 per cent of all the inmates in
India's jails are convicts while a whopping 67 per cent of them are
undertrials. There is just one jail official per eight inmates.

Two appeals and a rejoinder later, Sharma received information from
only two jails— Meerut and Ghaziabad— that two prisoners, one male and
one female, were languishing in Ghaziabad jail even after completion
of their terms. As for the query about the scrutiny of the prisoners
the response was "Nil". "It is indeed ironical that the department
meant to bring reforms in jails has not even scrutinised the status
of the prisoners during the last five years. I am writing to the CM
and the Governor to take action and ensure that either the department
should prove worthy of its name or it should drop the words
'administration and reforms' from its name," says Sharma.

Earlier this year, Law Minister Veerappa Moily launched a drive for
the speedy conclusion of the cases of undertrials and to ensure their
release. Till July this year, UP had topped the list in that mission
by releasing 52,843 undertrials and settling the cases of 4,203 more.
But certainly more steps are needed in this direction.

--
Urvashi Sharma

RTI Helpmail( Web Based )
aishwaryaj2010@gmail.com

Mobile Rti Helpline
8081898081 ( 8 A.M. to 10 P.M. )


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