Need to hire 400 more staff members to give phone access to jail inmates: Govt tells Bombay High Court

20 June,2022 03:48 PM IST |  Mumbai  |  mid-day online correspondent

In its affidavit, the state government said it had provided for `coin boxes` where inmates could make phone calls after depositing coins in the phone box, and added that it had also procured `smart phones, Wi-Fi (facilities), tablets etc` for phone and video calls

Bombay High Court. Pic/iStock


On Monday, the Maharashtra government told the Bombay High Court that prisons in the state were severely short-staffed. It also mentioned that the state did not have the infrastructure to provide phone and video call access to jail inmates.

In an affidavit filed in the Bombay High Court through Maharashtra Additional Director-General (Prisons) Sunil Ramanand, the state government said it will need to hire at least 400 more staff members to even begin offering such facilities to prison inmates.

The government was responding to a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) filed by the People's Union of Civil Liberties, seeking immediate installation of phones and other electronic modes of communication for the resumption of video and voice calling facilities in all prisons in the state, so that the inmates can speak with their lawyers and relatives.

The PIL said during the first two waves of the Covid-19 pandemic, prison authorities across the state had provided telephone and video conference facilities to all prisoners irrespective of the offences they were charged with.

The state government, in its affidavit, said the above facility had been introduced as an "exception" between 2020 and 2021 "purely on compassionate and humanitarian grounds" because of the pandemic-related restrictions.

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In its affidavit, the state government said it had provided for 'coin boxes' where inmates could make phone calls after depositing coins in the phone box, and added that it had also procured "smart phones, Wi-Fi (facilities), tablets etc" for phone and video calls.

However, now that the state had resumed 'mulaqaat', or physical meetings between inmates and their lawyers and other visitors, the above facilities had been withdrawn, it said.

The state did not have the requisite "machinery or infrastructure" to continue providing telephone and video conferencing facilities, the affidavit informed.
Besides, while the 'Model Prison Manual, 2016' prepared by the Union Home Ministry provides for video and phone call facilities for inmates, the manual has not yet been adopted by Maharashtra, the state government told the HC.

"The prayer of the petitioner, therefore, cannot be granted. The management of prisons in Maharashtra is governed by the 'Maharashtra Prison Manual 1979.' This manual doesn't provide for video-calling facilities for inmates to contact their lawyers or family members," the affidavit said.

The state said in the absence of a statutory provision for the same, such facilities cannot be claimed as a matter of right by prison inmates.

During the day's hearing, a bench of Chief Justice Dipankar Datta and Justice SS Shinde directed Maharashtra government's counsel, Advocate General (AG) Ashutosh Kumbhakoni, to visit some prisons in the state to take stock of facilities provided there, including access to phone calls and video-conferencing.

The HC directed the AG to submit within three weeks an independent report after his visit.

During the hearing, Justice Shinde said "Most prisons have a capacity of 600 inmates, and there are over 3,500 prisoners. So, all facilities have to be updated accordingly. The prisoners should know about the status of their matter and how much sentence have they served."

"We will keep this (matter) after three weeks. In the meantime, on Justice Shinde's request, you (AG) should visit prison and give us your independent report," the HC said.

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