DELHI
PRISONS ACT, 2000
Preamble - DELHI PRISONS ACT, 2000
THE DELHI PRISONS ACT, 2000
[Act No. 02 of 2002]
[28th January, 2002]
PREAMBLE
An Act to
provide for the detention of prisoners committed to prison custody and for
their reformation and rehabilitation with a view to ensuring safe detention and
minimum standards of treatment of prisoners consistent with the principles of
dignity of the individuals and for matters connected therewith or incidental
thereto.
Be it enacted by the
Legislative Assembly of the National Capital Territory of Delhi in the Fifty
First Year of the Republic of India as follows:
Section 1 - Title, extent and commencement
(1) This Act
may be called the 'Delhi Prisons Act, 2000'.
(2) It
extends to the whole of the National Capital Territory of Delhi.
(3) It shall
come into force on such date as the Lieutenant Governor of the National Capital
Territory of Delhi may, by notification in the Official Gazette, appoint.
Section 2 - Definitions
(1) In this
Act, unless the context otherwise requires;
(a) "
civil prisoner "means any prisoner who is not a criminal prisoners;
(b) "competent
authority" means any officer having jurisdiction and due legal authority
to deal with a particular matter in question;
(c) "convicted
criminal prisoner" means any criminal prisoner under sentence of a court
or court martial, and includes a person detained in prison under the provisions
of Chapter VII of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974);
(d) "criminal
prisoner" means any prisoner duly committed to custody under the writ,
warrant or order of any court or authority exercising criminal jurisdiction, or
by order of a court martial;
(e) "court"
includes a corner and any officer lawfully exercising civil, criminal or revenue
jurisdiction;
(f) "dangerous
prisoner" means any prisoner who is violently pre-disposed or likely to
escape;
(g) "Delhi"
means the National Capital Territory of Delhi;
(h) "furlough"
means leave as a reward granted to a convicted prisoner who has been sentenced
to rigorous imprisonment for five years or more and has undergone three years
thereof;
(i) "Government"
means the Lieutenant Governor referred in article 239AA of the Constitution;
(j) "History
ticket" means the ticket exhibiting such information as is required in
respect of each prisoner by this Act or the rules thereunder;
(k) "Inspector
General" means the Inspector General of Prisons,
(l) "Lieutenant
Governor" means the administrator of the National Capital Territory of
Delhi appointed by the President under article 239 of the Constitution;
(m) "Medical
Officer" means a Gazetted officer of the Government and includes a medical
practitioner declared by general or special orders of the Government to be a
medical officer;
(n) "medical
subordinate" means a qualified medical assistant;
(o) "notification"
means a notification published in the Official Gazette;
?
(p) "parole
system" means the system of releasing prisoners from prison on parole by
suspension of their sentences in accordance with the rules;
(q) "prescribed"
means prescribed by rules;
(r) "prison"
means any jail or place used permanently or temporarily under the general or
special orders of the Government for the detention of prisoners, and includes
all lands, buildings and appurtenances thereto, but does not include :--
(i) any price
for the confinement of prisoners who are exclusively in the custody of police;
(ii) any place
specially appointed by the Government under Section 417 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974).
(iii) Any place
which has been declared by the Government by general or special order to be a
special prison;
(s) "prohibited
article" means an article, the introduction or removal of which into or
out of a prison is prohibited by any rule made under this Act;
(t) "remission
system" means the system of regulating the award of marks to, and the
consequent shortening of sentences of, prisoner in prison;
(u) "
rules" means a rule for the time being in force, made under or in
pursuance of, this Act;
(v) "
section" means a section of this Act;
(w) "security
prisoner" means any prisoner against whom there is a threat from any
person;
(x) "
senior medical officer " means a medical officer senior to other medical
officers posted in a prison;
(y) "subordinate
officer" means every non-Gazetted officer serving in the prison;
(z) "Superintendent"
means the officer who is appointed by the Government to be in Charge of a
prison with such designation as it may specify;
(aa)
"young offender" means a person who has attained the age of sixteen
years in case of a boy and eighteen years in case of a girl, but has not
attained the age of twenty one years;
(2) Words and
expressions used herein and defined but defined in any other enactment
applicable in Delhi shall have the meanings respectively assigned to them in
those enactments.
Section 3 - Accommodation in prisons
The Government shall
provide in its jurisdiction accommodation in prisons constructed and regulated
in such manner as to comply with the requisitions of this Act in respected of
the separation of prisoners.
Section 4 - Power of State Government to Appoint Inspector General and other Officers and staff
(1) The
Government shall, by notification, appoint an Inspector General of Prisons to
be in charge of the administration and management of all the prisons, in Delhi,
who shall belong to IAS/IPS service.
(2) The
Government may also, by notification, appoint as many Additional, Joint, Deputy
or Assistant Inspectors General of prisons as it may think fit or necessary to
assist the Inspector General of Prisons in exercising the powers and performing
the functions of the Inspector General under this Act.
(3) The
Government shall provide the necessary administrative staff in the headquarters
and the regional offices of the Inspector General.
Section 5 - Inspector General
(1) The
Inspector General shall exercise his powers and perform his functions under
this Act subject to the general supervision and control of the Government, and
the other officers appointed under this Act shall work under the general
supervision, control and direction of the Inspector General and shall be
responsible to him.
(2) The
Inspector General shall be responsible for the allotment of work to the
officers appointed under this Act and may delegate any of his functions to such
officers.
Section 6 - Officers of Prisons
For every prison there
shall be a Superintendent, a Deputy Superintendent, a Medical Officer, a Law
Officer, a Welfare Officer, and such other officers as the Government think it
necessary.
Section 7 - Temporary Accommodation for Prisoners
Whenever it appears to the
Inspector General that:
(a) the
number of prisoners in any prison is greater can conveniently or safely be kept
therein and it is not convenient to transfer the excess number to some other
prison;
(b) from the
outbreak of epidemic disease within any prison or for any other reason, it is
desirable to provide for the temporary shelter and safe custody of any
prisoners, Provision shall be made, by such officer and in such manner as
the Government may direct, for the shelter and safe custody in temporary
prisons, of so many of the prisoners as cannot conveniently or safely be kept
in the prison.
Section 8 - Control and duties of officers of prisons
All officers of a prison
shall obey the directions of the Superintendent; all officers subordinate to
the Deputy Superintendent shall perform such duties as may be imposed on them
by the Deputy Superintendent with the sanction of the Superintendent or be
prescribed by rules Under Section 71.
Section 9 - Officers not to have business dealing with prisoners and others
(1) No
officer of a prison shall sell or let, nor shall any person in trust or
employed by him sell or let, or derive any benefit from selling or letting, any
article to any prisoner or have any money or other business dealings, directly
or indirectly with any prisoner.
(2) No
officer of a prison shall accept any gift from a prisoner or a person having
any dealings with prison administration.
Section 10 - Officers not to be interested in prison contracts
No officer of a prison nor
any person in trust or employed by him, shall have any interest, direct or
indirect, in any contract for the supply to the prisons, nor shall be derive
any benefit, directly or indirectly, from the sale or purchase of any article
on behalf of the person or belonging to a prisoner.
Section 11 - Superintendent and his residence in prison
(1) Subject
to the orders of the Inspector General, the Superintendent shall manage the
prison in all matters relating to discipline, labour, expenditure, punishment
and control.
(2) The
Superintendent shall reside in the prison premises unless the Inspector General
permits him in writing to reside elsewhere.
Section 12 - Records to be kept by Superintendent
The Superintendent shall
keep or cause to be kept, the following records :--
(1) a
register of prisoners admitted;
(2) a book
showing when each prisoner is to be released;
(3) a
punishment book for the entry of the punishments inflicted on prisoners for
prison offences;
?
(4) a
visitor's book for the entry of any observations made by the visitors touching
any matters connected with the administration of the prison;
(5) a record
of the money and other articles taken from prisoners; and all such other
records as may be prescribed by rules made under section 71.
Section 13 - Duties of Medical Officer
Subject to the control of
the Superintendent, the Medical Officer shall have charge of health and
sanitary administration of the prisons. And shall perform such duties as may be
prescribed by rules made by the Government under section 71.
Section 14 - Medical Officer to report in certain cases
(1) Whenever
the Medical Officer in charge of a prison has reason to believe that the mind
of a prisoner is, or is likely to be injuriously affected by the discipline or
treatment to which he is subjected, the Medical Officer shall report the case
in writing to the Superintendent, together with such observations as he may
think proper.
(2) The
Medical Officer shall not administer any such medicine to any prisoner without
informing him of what is being administered to him.
This report, with the
orders of the Superintendent thereon, shall forthwith be sent to the Inspector
General for Information.
Section 15 - Report on death of prisoner
(1) On the
death of any prisoner, the Medical Officer in charge shall forthwith record in
a register the following particulars, so far as they can be ascertained, namely
:--
(a) the day
on which the deceased first complained of illness or injury or he was observed
to be ill or injured;
?
(b) the
labour, if any, on which he was engaged on that day;
(c) the scale
of his diet on that day;
(d) the day
on which he was admitted to hospital;
(e) the day
on which the Medical Officer was first informed of the illness or injury;
(f) the
nature of the disease and/or injury;
(g) when the
deceased was last seen before his death by the Medical Officer or medical
subordinate;
(h) when the
prisoner died; and
(i) an
account of the appearances after death, together with any special remarks that
appear to the Medical Officer to be required.
(2) The
report of such death shall forthwith be sent to the Superintendent and the
Inspector General by the Medical Officer,
(3) When the
Superintendent or Inspector General receives information that a person has
committed suicide, or has been killed by another, or by an accident, or has
died under circumstances raising a reasonable suspicion that some other person
has committed an offence, he shall immediately give information thereof to the
nearest Executive Magistrate empowered to hold inquests, in accordance with sub
section (4) of section 174 and section 176 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1973 (2 of 1974) and such Magistrate shall hold an inquiry into the cause of
death.
Section 16 - Deputy Superintendent to reside in prison
The Deputy Superintendent
shall reside in the prison, unless the Inspector General Permits him in writing
to reside elsewhere.
Section 17 - Deputy Superintendent to give notice of death of prisoners
Upon the death of a
prisoner, Deputy Superintendent shall give immediate notice thereof to the
Superintendent and the Medical Officer.
Section 18 - Responsibility of Deputy Superintendent
The Deputy Superintendent
shall be responsible for the safe custody of the records to be kept under
section 12 for the commitment warrants and all other documents confided to his
care, and for the money and other articles taken from prisoners.
Section 19 - Deputy Superintendent to be present at night
The Deputy Superintendent
shall not be absent from the prison for a night without permission in writing
from the Superintendent, but, if absent without leave for a night from
unavoidable necessity, he shall immediately report the fact and the cause of it
to the Superintendent.
Section 20 - Powers of Assistant Superintendent
An Assistant Superintendent
shall, subject to the orders of the Superintendent, be competent to perform any
of the duties, and be subject to all the responsibilities of a Deputy
Superintendent under this Act or any rule made thereunder.
Section 21 - Duties of gatekeeper
The officer acting as
gatekeeper, or any other officer of the prison, may examine anything carried in
or out of the prison, and may stop and search or cause to be searched any
person suspected of bringing any prohibited article into or out of the prison,
or of carrying out any property belonging to the prison, and, if any such
article or property be found, shall give immediately notice thereof to the
Deputy Superintendent.
Section 22 - Subordinate officer not to be absent without leave
Officers subordinate to
Deputy Superintendent shall not be absent from the prison without leave from
the Superintendent or from the Deputy Superintendent.
Section 23 - Utilisation of the services of prisoners
The Superintendent may
utilise the service of prisoners, in accordance with the rules, for efficient
management of the prison.
Section 24 - Prisoners to be examined on admission
(1) Whenever
a prisoners is admitted in prison, he shall be searched, and all weapons and
prohibited articles shall be taken from him.
(2) Every
criminal prisoner shall also, after admission, be examined on the same day
under the general or special orders of the Medical Officer, who shall enter or
cause to be entered in a book, to kept by the Deputy Superintendent, a record
of the state of prisoner's health, and of any wounds or marks on his person,
the class of labour he is fit for if sentenced to rigorous imprisonment, and
any observations which the Medical Officer thinks fit to add.
(3) In the
case of a female prisoner, the search shall be carried out by the matron and
the medical examination by the female medical officer.
Section 25 - Effects of prisoners
All money or other articles
in respect whereof no order of a competent court has been made, and which may,
with proper authority, be brought into the prison by any criminal prisoner or
brought to the prison for his use, shall be placed in the custody of the Deputy
Superintendent.
Section 26 - Removal and discharge of prisoners
(1) All
prisoners, before being removed to any other prison, shall be examined by the
Medical Officer/Female Officer, as the case may be.
(2) No
prisoner shall be removed from one prison to another unless the Medical
Officer/Female Medical Officer certifies that the prisoner is free from any
illness rendering him unfit for removal.
(3) No
prisoner shall be discharged against his will from prison, if labouring under
any acute or dangerous distemper, nor until, in the opinion of the Medical
Officer/Female Medical Officer, such discharge is safe.
(4) The
Superintendent may seek orders, as soon as possible from the court of Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate regarding further detention of a prisoner whose release
orders have been received in local cases and against whom a production warrant
from an outside court has been received by the Superintendent.
Section 27 - Responsibility of Superintendent
The discipline in the
prison shall be maintained by the Superintendent firmly, fairly and in an
equitable manner in accordance with the rules.
Section 28 - Separation of prisoners
The requisition of this Act
with respect to the separation of prisoners are as follows:--
(1) in a
prison containing female as well as male prisoners, the females shall be
imprisoned in separate buildings, or separate parts of the same building, in
such a manner as to prevent their seeing, or conversing with the male
prisoners;
(2) female
prisoners convicted or charged for an offence under the Immoral Traffic
(Prevention) Act, 1956 (104 of 1956) for any sexual or other offence involving
grave moral depravity, shall be segregated from all other types of female
prisoners;
(3) in a
prison where a male prisoners under the age of twenty-one are confined, means
shall be provided for separating them altogether from the other prisoner and
for separating those of them who have arrived at the age of sixteen years but
are below the age of eighteen years;
(4) unconvinced
criminal prisoners shall be kept apart from convicted criminal prisoners;
(5) civil
prisoners shall be kept apart from criminal prisoners;
(6) dangerous/security
prisoners shall be kept separately;
(7) detenus
shall be kept apart; and
(8) all blood
relation prisoners, separated on grounds of different sex, shall be allowed to
meet each other once a week in presence of a jail officer.
Section 29 - Association and segregation of prisoners
Subject to the requirements
of the last foregoing section, criminal prisoners may be confined either in association
or individually in cells or partly in one way and partly in the other.
Section 30 - Prisoners under sentence of death
(1) Every
prisoner under sentence of death shall, immediately on his arrival in the
prison after sentence, be searched by, or by the order of, the Superintendent
and all articles shall be taken from him which the Superintendent deems it
dangerous or inexpedient to leave in his possession.
(2) Every
such prisoners under a finally executable sentence shall be confined in a cell
apart from all other prisoners, and shall be placed by day and by night under
the charge of a guard.
Section 31 - Maintenance of certain prisoners from private sources
A civil prison shall be
permitted to maintain himself, and to purchase, or receive from private sources
at proper hours and days foods, clothing, bedding or other necessaries, but
subject to examination and to such rules as may be approved by the Inspector
General.
Section 32 - Restriction on transfer of food and clothing between certain prisoners
No part of any food,
clothing, bedding or other necessaries belonging to any civil prisoners and any
prisoner transgressing the provisions of this section shall lose the privilege
or purchasing food or receiving it from private sources, for such time as the
Superintendent thinks proper.
Section 33 - Supply of clothing and bedding to civil prisoners
Every civil prisoner unable
to provide himself with sufficient clothing, bedding and other necessities
shall be supplied with such clothing, bedding and other necessities as may be
prescribed in the rules.
Section 34 - Employment of civil prisoners
(1) Civil
Prisoners may, with the permission of the Superintendent, and subject to such
restrictions as the Superintendent may impose, work and follow any trade or
profession available in prison.
(2) Civil
prisoners finding their own implements, and not maintained at the expense of
the prison, shall be allowed to receive the whole of their earnings, but the
earnings of such as are furnished with implements or are maintained at the
determined by the Superintendent, for the use of implements and the cost of
maintenance.
Section 35 - Employment of criminal prisoners
(1) A
criminal prisoner desiring to be employed on labour, may be employed with the
permission of the Superintendent subject to such restrictions as may be
prescribed in the rules made under this Act.
(2) No
criminal prisoner sentenced to labour or employed on labour at his own desire
shall, except on an emergency with the sanction in writing of the
Superintendent, be kept to labour for more than nine hours in any one day.
(3) The
Medical Officer shall from time to examine the labouring prisoners while they
are employed, and shall at least once in every fortnight cause to be recorded
upon the history ticket of each prisoner employed on labour the weight of such
at the time.
(4) When the
Medical Officer is of opinion that the health of any prisoner suffers from
employment on any kind or class of labour, such prisoner shall not be employed
on that labour but shall be placed on such other kind or class of labour as the
Medical Officer may consider suited for him
Section 36 - Employment of criminal prisoners sentenced to simple imprisonment
Provision shall be made by
the Superintendent for the employment (as long as they so desire) of all
criminal prisoners sentenced to simple imprisonment. No such prisoners shall be
punished for neglect of work.
Section 37 - Sick prisoners
(1) The names
of prisoners desiring to see the Medical Officer or medical subordinate or
appearing out of health in mind or body shall, without delay, be reported by
the officer in-charge of such prisoners, to the Deputy Superintendent.
(2) The
Deputy Superintendent shall without delay, call the attention of Medical
Officer or medical subordinate to any prisoner desiring to see him, or who is
ill, or whose state of mind or body appears to require attention, and shall
carry into effect all written directions given by the Medical Officer or
medical subordinate respecting alternation of the discipline or treatment of
any such prisoner.
Section 38 - Record of directions of Medical Officer
All directions given by the
Medical Officer or medical subordinate in relation to any prisoner, with the
expectation of orders for the supply of medicines, or directions relating to
such matters as are carried into effect by the Medical Officer himself or under
his superintendence, shall be entered day by day in the prisoner's history
ticket, or in such other record as the Government may be rule direct, and the
Deputy Superintendent shall make an entry in its proper place stating in
respect of each direction the fact of its having been or not having been
complied with, accompanied by such observations, if any, as the Deputy
Superintendent thinks fits to make, and the date of the entry.
Section 39 - Hospital
In every prison a
hospital/dispensary or proper place for the reception of sick prisoners shall
be provided.
Section 40 - Interviews
Due provision shall be made
for the admission, at proper time and days and under proper restrictions, into
every prison of person with whom prisoners may desire to communicate, care
being taken that so, far as may be consistent with the interest of justice,
prisoners may see their duly authorised and qualified legal practioner without
the presence of any other person.
Section 41 - Search of visitors
(1) The
Deputy Superintendent may demand the name and address of any visitor to a
prisoner, and when the Deputy Superintendent has any ground for suspicion, may
search any visitor, or cause him to be searched, but the search shall not be
made in the presence of any prisoner or of another visitor.
(2) In case
of any such visitor refusing to permit himself to be searched, the Deputy
Superintendent may deny him admission and the grounds of such record as the
Government may direct.
Section 42 - Letters
(1) A
prisoner shall have the facility of writing such number of letters to his
relatives and friends as may be prescribed.
(2) A
prisoner may be allowed to write any number of Letters at his cost
(3) The
Superintendent shall examine every letter written by a prisoner and may ask the
prisoner concerned to delete any portion of the letter which, in his opinion,
is likely to endanger the security of the State or prison or contains false
information about the affairs of the prison.
(4) The
Superintendent shall examine every letter sent to any prisoner from outside and
delete any portion thereof which, in his opinion, is likely to endanger the
security of the State or prison before it is delivered to the prisoner.
(5) The
facility of writing letters is contingent on good conduct and may be withdrawn
or postponed by the Superintendent on bad conduct.
Section 43 - Penalty for introduction or removal of, into or from prison and communication with prisoners
Whoever, contrary to any
rule under section 71 introduces or removes or attempts by any means what ever
to introduce or remove, into or from any prison, or supplies or attempts to
supply to any prisoner, outside the limits of a prison, any prohibited article,
and every officer or member of staff of a prison who, contrary to any such
rule, knowingly suffers any such article to be introduced into or removed from
any prison, to be possessed by any prisoner, or to be supplied to any prisoner
outside the limits of a prison, and whoever, contrary to any such rule,
communicates or attempts to communicate with any prisoner, and whoever abets
any offence made punishable by this section, shall, on conviction before a
Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months, or
to fine not exceeding six months, or to fine not exceeding ten thousand rupees,
or to both.
Section 44 - Power to arrest for offence under section 43
When any person, in the
presence of any officer of a prison, commits any offence specified in the last
foregoing section and refuges on demand of such officer to state his name and
residence or gives a name or residence, which such officer knows or has reason
to believe, to be false, such officer may arrest him, and shall without
unnecessary delay make him over to a police officer, and thereupon such police
officer shall proceed as if the offence had been committed in his presence.
Section 45 - Publication of penalties
The Superintendent shall
cause to be affixed, in a conspicuous place outside the prison, a notice in official
languages of Delhi setting forth the acts prohibited under section 43 and the
penalties incurred by their commission.
Section 46 - Prison offences
The following acts are
declared to be prison offences when committed by a prisoner:--
(1) such
willful disobedience to any regulation of prison as shall have been declared by
rules made under section 71 to be a prison offence:
(2) any
assault or use of criminal force;
?
(3) willfully
injures himself;
(4) the use
of insulting or threatening language;
(5) immoral
or indecent or disorderly behaviour;
(6) willfully
disabling himself from labour;
(7) contumaciously
refusing to work;
(8) filing,
cutting, altering or removing handcuffs, fetters or bars without due authority;
(9) willful
idleness or negligence of work by any prisoner sentenced to rigorous
imprisonment;
(10) willfully
mismanagement of work by any prisoner sentenced to rigorous imprisonment;
(11) willful
damage to prison property;
(12) tampering
with or defacing history tickets, records or documents;
(13) receiving,
possessing or transferring any prohibited article;
(14) feigning
illness;
(15) willfully
bringing a false accusation against any officer or prisoner;
(16) omitting
or refusing to report, as soon as it comes to his knowledge, the occurrence of
any fire, any plot or conspiracy, any escape, attempt or preparation to escape,
and any attack or preparation for attack upon any prisoner or prison official;
(17) conspiring
to escape, or to assist in escaping;
(18) converting
or attempting to convert a prisoner to a different religious faith or willfully
hurting other' religious feelings, beliefs and faith;
(19) failing
to assist, or preventing other persons from assisting prison officials in
suppressing violence, assault, riot, mutiny, attack, gross personal violence,
or in any other emergencies;
(20) sending
messages surreptitiously by writing or speech or signs;
(21) participating
in any riot or mutiny or abetting with another prisoner or prisoners to commit
riot or mutiny;
(22) stealing,
damaging, destroying, disfiguring or misappropriating any prison property or
prisoners' articles and property;
(23) refusing
to eat foot or going on hunger strike:--
Provided that this shall
not be applicable to Male/Female prisoners on religious grounds and all
possible facilities shall be extended to such prisoners in performance of their
religious obligations.
(24) cooking
unauthorisedly inside the cell or any place inside the prison;
(25) participating
in, or organising of, unauthorised activities, like gambling,
drinking,
dealing in intoxicated articles and the like;
(26) aiding or
abetting the commission of any of the aforesaid offences; and
(27) any other
unauthorised, unlawful or illegal act as may be specified in the rules.
Section 47 - Punishment of such prison offences
(1) The
Superintendent may himself conduct or authorise an officer not below the rank
of Deputy Superintendent to conduct an inquiry inside the prison of any person
alleged to have committed an offence specified in section 46 and impose any of
the following punishments :--
(a) a formal
warning, which shall be personally addressed to the prisoner by the
Superintendent and recorded in the punishment book;
(b) forfeiture
of remission upto a period of thirty days at any one time or, with the approval
of the Inspector General, remove a prisoner from the remission system up to a
period of six months:
Provided that the Inspector
General shall have power to forfeit all earned remissions, other than
remissions given by the Government, or to remove a prisoner from the remission
system for the entire period of his imprisonment;
(c) stoppage
of recreational facilities upto a period of one month or canteen facilities
upto a period of three months or stoppage of interviews for a period of one
month;
(d) in case
of breaches and violations in conditions of release on parole or furlough, not counting
the said period towards imprisonment;
(e) segregation
upto a period of three months, and with the sanction of the Inspector General,
upto a period of six months;
(f) separate
confinement upto a period of one month at a time, and with the sanction of the
Inspector General upto a period of three months subject to such conditions as
may be prescribed.
Explanation--Separate
confinement means such confinement with or without labour as schedules a
prisoner from communication with, but not from sight of other prisoner and
allows him not less than one hour's exercise per day and to have his meals in
association with one or more other prisoners.
(g) Cellular
confinement for any period not exceeding fourteen days with the approval of
Inspector General:
Provided that, after each
period of cellular confinement, and interval of not less duration than such
period must clause before the prisoner is again sentenced to cellular
confinement.
Explanation--Cellular
confinement means such confinement with or without labour as entirely secludes
a prisoner from communication with, but not from sight of, other prisoners.
(2) ??While undergoing any of the punishments
awarded under Sub-section (1) above, the following privileges may, however, be
extended to the prisoners, namely:--
(a) provision
of letters and supply of religious and moral books as far as the rules of the
prison provide;
(b) interviews
with members of family of the prisoner may be granted in accordance with rules
by the Superintendent except in case of punishment under clause (c) of
Sub-section 1 above.
Section 48 - Limitation to Award of punishment under section 47
(1) The
Superintendent shall have power to award any of the punishments enumerated
above;
Provided in the case of
separate confinement for a period exceeding one month, the previous
confirmation of the Inspector General shall be obtained.
(2) No
officer subordinate to the Superintendent shall have power to award any
punishment, whatsoever.
(3) No
punishment shall be imposed without judicial appraisal of Sessions Judge and
where such intimation, on account of emergency, is difficult, such information
shall be given with in two days of the action.
(4) Any
incident of serious or repeated misconduct by a prisoner facing trial may be
intimated by the Superintendent to the trial court.
Section 49 - Punishment to be in accordance with foregoing sections
Except by order of a Court
of Law, no punishment other than the punishments specified in the foregoing
sections shall be inflicted on any prisoner otherwise than in accordance with
the provisions of those sections.
Section 50 - Entries in punishment book
(1) In the
punishment book prescribed in section 12, there shall be recorded, in respect
of every punishment inflicted, the prisoner's name, register number and the
class (whether habitual or not) to which he belongs, the prison offence of
which he was guilty, the date on which such prison offence was committed, the
number of previous prison offences recorded against the prisoner, and the date
of his last prison offence, the punishment awarded, and the date of infliction.
(2) In the
case of every serious prison offence, the names of witnesses and substance of
their evidence, the defence of the prisoner, and the finding with the reasons
therefore, shall be recorded.
(3) Against
the entries relating to each punishment, the Deputy Superintendent and
Superintendent shall affix their initials and evidence of the correctness of
the entries.
Section 51 - Procedure on committal of in-house offence
(1) If any
prisoner is guilty of any offence against prison discipline which, by reason of
his having frequently committed such offences or otherwise, in the opinion of
the Superintendent, is not adequately punishable by the infliction of any
punishment, which he has power under this Act to award, the Superintendent may
forward such prisoner to the Court of the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate or of
any Metropolitan Magistrate having jurisdiction, together with a statement of
the circumstance and such Magistrate shall thereupon inquire into and try the charge
so brought against the prisoner, and upon conviction, may sentence him to
imprisonment which may extend to one year, such term to be in addition to any
term for which such prisoner was undergoing imprisonment when he committed such
offence, or may sentence him to any of the punishments enumerated in section
47:
Provided that any such case
may be transferred for inquiry and trial by the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate
to any Metropolitan Magistrate.
(2) No person
shall under Sub-section (1) above be punished twice for the same offence.
Section 52 - Offences by prison subordinates
(1) Every
Deputy Superintendent or officer of a prison subordinate to him who shall be
guilty of any violation of duty or willful breach, or neglect of any rule or
regulation or lawful order made by competent authority, or who shall withdraw
from the duties of his office without permission, or who shall willfully
overstay any leave granted to him, or who shall engage without authority in any
employment other than his prison duty, or who shall be guilty of cowardice,
shall be liable, on conviction before a Magistrate, to a fine not exceeding ten
thousand rupees, or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding six months or to
both.
(2) No person
under Sub-section (1) above shall be punished twice for the same offence.
Section 53 - Procedure for conducting enquiries for the award of punishment
(1) No
prisoner shall be awarded any punishment Under section 47 unless he has been
informed of the offence alleged against him and given a reasonable opportunity
of being heard in his defence;
(2) No
prisoner shall be punished twice for the same offence:
(3) Subject
to the provisions of Sub-section (1) and (2) above, the Superintendent may
follow such procedure, for the holding of inquires, including framing of
charges against a prisoner, segregation of prisoners, pending inquiry, medical
examination in case of inquiries, conduct of the inquiry and other matters
regarding requests for appeal or revision, as may be prescribed;
(4) Where the
act of the prisoner is an offence punishable under this Act and under the
Indian Penal Code, 1860 (45 of 1860) or any local or special enactments, it
shall be in the discretion of the Superintendent to deal with the case himself
or send it to the concerned Magistrate.
Provided that where the
offence committed is a cognizable offence punishable with imprisonment for a
term of three years or above, he shall initiate proceedings for the offender.
Section 54 - Punishment for not fulfilling conditions subject to which remission, etc was given
(1) Where any
prisoner fails without sufficient cause to observe any of the conditions on, or
subject to, which his sentence was remitted or suspended, or he was released on
parole or furlough, the competent authority may cancel such order granting
remission, suspension, or parole or furlough, and?
(a) If the
prisoner is at large, he shall be arrested by any police officer without a
warrant and remanded to undergo the unexpired portion of his sentence;
(b) shall, on
conviction by a Court, be punishable, in addition to the sentence he is
undergoing, with imprisonment for term which may extend to two years or with
fine, or with both.
(2) No court
shall take cognizance of an offence punishable under sub-section (1) except
with the previous sanction of the Government or the authority which ordered the
suspension, remission, parole, or furlough, as the case may be.
Section 55 - Liability to provide safe custody and security of prisoners
(1) The
Superintendent shall be responsible to undertake effective measures to ensure
safe custody and security of prisoners.
(2) Confinement
in iron with the permission of the court: whenever the Superintendent has
reason to believe that a prisoner is likely to jump prison or break out of the
custody in view of his proneness to violence or his tendency to escape or his
being so dangerous or desperate that no other practicable way of preventing his
escape is available except by confirming him in orphans, he may so confine him
with the permission of the court.
(3) Use of
handcuffs and fetters in emergent situation: In emergent situations, it shall
be open to the Superintendent to use handcuffs and fetters to secure any
prisoners for reasons to be recorded in writing and under intimation to the
District and Sessions Judge within twenty four hours of using such handcuffs or
fetters
Section 56 - Prisoners exempted from imposition of handcuffs and fetters
No handcuffs and fetters
shall be imposed in respect of:--
(i) ???Female prisoners;
(ii) ???Civil prisoners; and
(iii) ??Prisoners who are aged, physically infirm or
seriously ill.
Section 57 - Redressal of grievances of prisoners
(1) For the
purpose of receiving grievances from the prisoners and for the redressal of any
such grievance, a Grievance Redressal Committee may be appointed for each
prison with the following, namely:--
(a) Superintendent
Chairman
(b) Deputy
Superintendent Member
(c) Medical
Officer Member
(d) Welfare
Officer Member
(2) The
Grievance Redressal Committee shall meet at least once a month to deal with
petitions and representations from prisoners and it shall follow such procedure
for the examination of such petitions or representations as may be prescribed.
(3) Any
prisoner aggrieved by the decision of the Grievance redressal Committee may
appeal to the Deputy Inspector General within thirty days from the date of
communication of such decision.
(4) Notwithstanding
anything herein before contained, every prisoner shall be afforded full
opportunity to make a complaint to the Inspector General or the District and
Sessions Judge, who shall prescribe a mechanism for the redressal of such
complaints.
(5) There
shall be a Prison Advisory Board to advise the Govt. on the general governance
of the Jail in the manner as prescribed in rules.
Section 58 - Prohibition of strikes, etc
No person employed in the
prison shall have any right to form any union or join any such union either in
side or outside the prison for any purpose or for making or pressing any
demands to strike or start or continue any agitation inside the prison for
achieving any request or demand.
Section 59 - Extramural custody, control and employment of prisoners
A prisoner, when being
taken to or from any prison in which he may be lawfully confined, or whenever
he is working outside or is otherwise beyond the limits of any such prison in
or under the lawful custody or control of a prison officer belonging to such
prison, shall be deemed to be imprison and shall be subject to all directions
and discipline as if he were actually in prison.
Section 60 - Review of cases of criminal prisoners
(1) The
Government shall cause to be reviewed the cases of under trial prisoners
detained in the prison for more than one year or in case when the detention is
more than half of the maximum punishment for the offence provide under the law.
(2) The
Government shall ensure that no under trial is detained in prison for a period
exceeding the maximum period of punishment provided for the offence, or
offences as the case may be, for which he has been detained.
Section 61 - Use of minimum force
(1) For
controlling any incident of rioting, any officer of the prison shall use as
little force, and do as little injury to a person as may be consistent with
restoring order and detaining such person.
(2) Any
officer of the prison may use minimum force against army prisoner escaping or
attempting to escape, or using violence against any official of the prison or
any other person.
Section 62 - Legal aid
The Government shall
endeavour to provide free legal aid for the prisoners.
Section 63 - Rehabilitation of prisoners
The Government shall
endeavour to undertake measures towards the rehabilitation of prisoners.
Section 64 - Persons of unsound mind
No person of unsound mind
other than a criminal shall be kept in prison.
Section 65 - Protective custody
No person entitled to protective
custody shall be kept in the prison.
Section 66 - Accounts and audit
The accounts of every
prison shall be maintained and audited in such manner as may be prescribed by
the Government.
Section 67 - Training of prison officials
(1) The
Government shall provide training to all person officials to refresh them about
the responsibilities and rights of prisoners.
(2) The
duration and syllabus of such training shall be prescribed by the Government.
Section 68 - Delegation of powers
Any of the powers conferred
by this Act on the State Government may be exercised and performed by such
officers as the State Government may designate in this behalf.
Section 69 - Exercise of powers of Superintendent and Medical Officer
All or any of the powers
and duties conferred and imposed by this Act on a Superintendent or Medical
Officer may, in his absence, be exercised and performed by such other officers
as the Government may appoint in this behalf either by name or by his official
designation.
Section 70 - Protection of action taken in good faith
No suit, prosecution or
other legal proceeding shall lie against the Government or any functionary of
the Government in respect of anything which is done or intended to be done in
good faith in pursuance of this Act or the rules made or orders or directions
issued thereunder or acting in accordance with the provisions of Sub-section
(1) and (20) of section 60.
Section 71 - Powers of Government to make rules
(1) The
Government may make rules generally to carry out the Provisions of this Act.
(2) In
particular and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power, such
rules may provide for all or any of the following matters, namely :--
(i) ?Defining the acts which shall constitute
person offences;
(ii) Determining
the classification of prison offences into serious and minor offences;
(iii) Fixing
the punishments admissible under this Act which shall be awardable for
commission of prison offences or classes thereof;
(iv) Declaring
the circumstances in which acts constituting both a prison offence and an
offence under the Indian penal Code, 1860 (45 of 1860) may or may not be dealt
with as a prison offence;
(v) For the
award of marks and the shortening of sentences;
(vi) regulating
the use of force against any prisoner or body of prisoners in the case of a
riot, outbreak or attempt to escape;
(vii) Defining
the circumstances and regulating the conditions under which prisoners in danger
of death may be released;
(viii) For the
classification of prisons, and description and construction of wards, cells and
other places of detention;
(ix) For the
regulation by numbers, length or character of sentence, or otherwise, of the
prisoners to be confined in each class of prisons;
(x) For the
governance of prisons and for the appointment of officers under this Act;
(xi) As to the
food, bedding and clothing of criminal prisoners and of civil prisoners
maintained otherwise than at their own cost;
(xii) For the
employment, instruction and control of convicts within or without prisons;
(xiii) For
defining articles, the introduction or removal of which into or out of prisons
without due authority is prohibited;
(xiv) For
regulating the disposal of the proceeds of the employment of prisoners;
(xv) For
regulating the disposal of the proceeds of the employment of prisoners;
(xvi) For
adopting measures to bring about coordination between various departments of
the Government for upkeep, maintenance welfare of the prisoners and for dealing
with contingencies;
(xvii) For the
classification and the separation of prisoners;
(xviii) For
regulating the confinement of convicted criminal prisoner under section 29;
(xix) For the
preparation and maintenance of history tickets;
(xx) For
rewards for good conduct;
(xxi) For
regulating the transfer of prisoners whose term of imprisonments is about to
expire subject, however, to the consent of the Government of any other State or
Union Territory to which a prisoner is to be transferred;
(xxii) For the
treatment, transfer and disposal of mentally ill criminals confined in prisons;
(xxiii) For
regulating the transmission of appeals and petitions form prisoners and the
communication with their friends;
(xxiv) For the
appointment and guidance of visitors of prisons;
(xxv)For
extending any or all of the provisions of this Act and of the rules thereunder
to subsidiary prisons or special places of confinement appointment under
section 417 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, (2 of 1974) and to the
officers employed, and the prisoners confined, therein;
(xxvi) In regard
to the admission, custody, employment diet, treatment and release of prisoners;
(xxvii) For
periodic review of cases of criminal prisoners detained in prisons for more
than one year and in cases when the detention is more than half of the maximum punishment
for the offence;
(xxviii) For
providing legal aid to prisoners;
(xxix) For
recruitment, training, conduct, punishment and appeal relating to the officials
of the prisons;
(xxx)For the
grant of parole, furlough and leave to prisoners;
(xxxi) For the
temporary release, suspension and remission of sentence of prisoners; and
(xxxii) Generally
for carrying into effect the purpose of this Act.
(3) ??Every rule made by the Government under this
Act shall be laid, as soon as may be after it is made, before the House of the Legislative
Assembly of Delhi while it is in session for a total period of thirty days
which may be comprised in one session or in two or more successive sessions,
and if, before the expiry of the session immediately following the session or
the successive sessions aforesaid, the House agrees in making any modification
in the rule or the House agrees that the rule should not be made, the rule
shall thereafter have effect only in such modified form or be of no effects as
the case may be; so, however, that any such modification or annulment shall be
without prejudice to the validity of anything previously done under that rule.
Section 72 - Exhibition of copies of Rules
Copies of rules under
section 71 so far as they affect the governance of prisoners, shall be
exhibited both in English and in official languages of the Delhi in some place
to which all persons employed within the prison have access.
Section 73 - Repeal and savings
(1) The
Prisons Act, 1894 (IX of 1894) in its application to Delhi is hereby repealed
(2) Notwithstanding
the repeal by this Act of the Prisons Act, 1894 referred to in sub-section (1)
above, all rules, regulations orders, directions, notifications relating to the
prison administration in Delhi, made under the prisons act, 1894 and in force immediately
before the commencement of this Act shall, except where and so far as they are
inconsistent with or repugnant to the provisions of this Act, continue in force
until altered, amended or repealed by rules made under this Act.
Section 74 - Power to remove difficulties
(1) If any
difficulty arises in giving effect to any of the provisions of this Act, the
Government may, by order published in the Official Gazette, make such
provisions or take such measures, not inconsistent with the provisions of this
Act, as appear to it to be necessary or expedient for removing the difficulty;
Provided that no such order
shall be made after the expiry of a period of three years from the date of the
commencement of this Act.
(2) The
Government may make an order under sub-section (1) to have effect from any date
not earlier than the date of the commencement of this Act.
(3) An order
made under sub-section (1) shall be laid, as soon as may be after it is made,
before the House of the Legislative Assembly of Delhi.