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Prison rules amended to end caste-based discrimination

Photo for representational purpose only. File photo

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The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has amended the model prison manual to address the issue of ‘caste-based discrimination of the inmates’ in compliance with a recent Supreme Court verdict.

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In October last year, a Division Bench of CJI DY Chandrachud and Justices JB Pardiwala and Manoj Misra directed the Centre and states to revise their prison manuals and rules to address caste-based discrimination in prisons.

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According to the new addition in the manual, the prison authorities will have to strictly ensure that there is no discrimination, classification, or segregation of prisoners on the basis of their caste.

The Ministry noted that the provisions of The Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers and their Rehabilitation Act, 2013, shall have a binding effect even in Prisons and Correctional Institutions.

“Manual scavenging or hazardous cleaning of a sewer or a septic tank inside a prison shall not be permitted,” it said.

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The MHA has also announced that it will replace the existing definition of ‘Habitual Offender’ in the Model Prison Manual, 2016, and the Model Prisons and Correctional Services Act, 2023.

From now onwards, a habitual offender would mean a person who during any continuous period of five years, has been convicted and sentenced to imprisonment on more than two occasions on account of one or more offences committed on different occasions and not constituting parts of the same transaction, such sentence not having been reversed in appeal or review.

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