Rahatkar said the SWC will form a three-member special investigation team (SIT) to further enquire into the death of the woman convict, Manju Shette, serving her sentence.
"According to the panchnama (inquest report), all her organs and body parts were intact and no new or old injuries were found on the private parts of Manju Shette," She said.
Manju, 45, died at government-run J J Hospital on Friday of her injuries sustained in thrashing by a woman jailer on June 23. The police had earlier said Manju, whose death had triggered protests in the prison, was allegedly tortured and a stick was inserted in her private parts.
According to her, Deputy Inspector General (Prisons) Swati Sathe today submitted a detailed report to the Women's Commission on Manju Shette's death and the subsequent protests by the jail inmates.
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Talking about the SIT, she said, "The Women's Commission will form a three-member SIT in connection with Manju's death. It will be chaired by a retired high court judge and it would comprise a retired senior police officer and a woman NGO member."
"Police have registered a case of murder against the jail staff, who allegedly beat up Manju Shette and they have been suspended," Rahatkar said.
"The SWC has sought a detailed report on the condition of women prisoners in the state within the next 15 days," she said.
Following Manju's death, the enraged inmates had risen in protest on Saturday, with some of them going to the prison terrace, while others making a bonfire of newspapers and documents inside the premises to express their anger.
Later, the Nagpada police had booked nearly 200 inmates of the Byculla jail, including Sheena Bora murder case accused Indrani Mukerjea, who is lodged in the same prison, for rioting, unlawful assembly, assault on a public servant and other relevant sections of the Indian Penal Code.
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