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Educating the criminal mind

Updated on: 09 March,2014 06:58 AM IST  | 
Amiya Kumar Kushwaha |

Criminal behaviour can be changed by imparting education. 

Educating the criminal mind

Inmates working at the tailoring unit of Tihar Jail.PIC/AFP

Criminal behaviour can be changed by imparting education. Towards this, the capital’s Tihar Jail, one of the largest in Asia, is vigorously conducting a literacy campaign among its teeming inmates, 20 per cent of whom are unlettered and a staggering 65 per cent have not even studied till Class 10.


Observing that the ‘lesser the literacy the more the crime seems to be the trend,’ prison authorities are conducting various education programmes to raise the awareness level of its inmates and broadening their mental horizons away from their criminal past.


Inmates working at the tailoring unit of Tihar Jail.PIC/AFP
Inmates working at the tailoring unit of Tihar Jail.PIC/AFP 


“As per data compiled, the majority of the prison population (around 65 per cent) has education below Class 10, thus providing the linkage between educational standard and criminality,” an official of Tihar Jail said.
The official added that the illiterate population of 20.68 per cent would have been much higher but for the jail's literacy programme.

Most of the prisoners in the illiterate category are newcomers.

The prison administration has set up centers of the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) and Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU) to impart education to prisoners.

The official said that adult education classes are being conducted in the 10 sub-jails in the prison that has 13,552 prisoners.

Among the convicts and undertrials, the maximum number are accused of rape and murder. Over 33 per cent convicts, and over 24 per cent undertrials are in jail for murder charges, while over 13 per cent of both categories are in jail for rape.

According to Tihar’s data, at the time of admission, more than 19 per cent of the males and 36 per cent of females were illiterate, while 44 per cent of males and 34 per cent females have not passed Class 10.
However, around five per cent of the males and six per cent of the females are graduates while one and three per cent in each category are postgraduates.

“The prison administration last year started stenography courses and foreign language classes in French, Spanish and German, as well as in Hindi and English to build self-confidence among the prison inmates,” said Director General of Prisons Vimlaa Mehra. The prison inmates are also being trained in hotel management in collaboration with the tourism ministry.

Mehra said that campus placements are also being organised to provide job opportunities to the qualified inmates to help them earn a respectable livelihood and keep them away from crime after their release.
Jail officials also encourage inmates to participate in activities such as poetry and essay writing to bring out their creativity, she said.
— IANS

Amiya Kumar Kushwaha can be contacted at amiya.k@ians.in.

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