Indo-Pak committee on prisoners visit jails
NEW DELHI, Jan 27(Agencies): A meeting of the India-Pakistan committee on Prisoners concluded here
today during which the members visited the Tihar Jail and central prisons in Jaipur and Amristar. A total of 46 Pakistani prisoners at the Tihar
jail here, 98 at Central Jail in Jaipur and 45 at Central Jail in Amritsar were presented before the committee during their visit from January 23-27,
the Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement. The committee, at the end of the visit, recommended that the 'Consular Access Agreement' of
May 2008 signed between two government must be implemented fully. Consular access must be provided within three months of the arrest and
repatriation must take place within one month of confirmation of national status and completion of sentences, the statement said giving details of the
recommendations. Justice (Retd) A S Gill, Justice (Retd) Nasir Aslam Zahid Justice (Retd) M A Khan and Justice (Retd) Mian Muhammad Ajmal were
members of the committee. It also sought a mechanism for compassionate and humanitarian consideration especially to women, juvenile and aged
prisoners. Consular access must be provided to all those prisoners who have not been given the same so far and the process of nationality
confirmation should start immediately after consular access is provided. "A mechanism should be developed for compassionate and humanitarian
consideration to be given to women, juvenile, mentally challenged, aged and all those prisoners suffering from serious illness, permanent physical
disability," the committee said. It was also recommended that serious or terminally and mentally challenged prisoners must be kept in hospitals
irrespective of confirmation of their national status and offence. Prisoners involved in minor offences like violation of Foreigners' Act, visa
and inadvertent border crossing deserve compassion from both the sides, they said. The committee noted that the respective courts must be requested
for expeditious trial of "undertrial" prisoners and that the provision of legal aid or attorneys to prisoners must be ensured at all stages of their
cases. The committee also endorsed the recommendations of the Home/Interior Secretary-level talks held on March 28-29 last year here to task the
Pakistani Maritime Security Agency and Coast Guard of India to work on the setting up a mechanism for release of inadvertent crossers (fishermen) and
their boats, on the same lines as inadvertent crossers on land. It was recommended that fishermen should be repatriated by sea lanes along with
their boats. It was also suggested that the next visit of the committee to Pakistani jails be arranged in the second half of April this year. The
committee will review the action taken report on the earlier recommendations when the committee meets next in Pakistan.
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