A committee comprising Director General of Police, Director General of Prisons and Principal Secretary Home will review the cases of all the youth under-trials lodged in various jails on charges of stone-pelting to give them an opportunity to live as productive citizens, she said while chairing a high-level meeting here this morning regarding bringing about Reforms in J&K s Prisons.
Mehbooba also asked Director General of Police K Rajendra Kumar to take up the matter regarding deportation of a mentally challenged Pakistani national to his country who is lodged in a jail in the state for having inadvertently crossed the LoC.
Stressing the need for review and upgradation of the Jail Manual in the State, the Chief Minister said the review, which is already over due, should be aimed at making the prisons "centres of reformation" and not the places of punishment.
She also called for identification of alternate site in the periphery of Srinagar city for shifting of Central Jail from its existing location in Kathidarwaza area of the Shahr-e-Khaas.
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Mehbooba said once the Central Jail Srinagar is shifted, the existing establishment in the Old City could be converted into a multi-utility recreational-cum-sports facility while some part could be also developed as an exclusive Handicrafts Promotion Centre.
She said directions have already been given regarding identification of suitable land in Jammu also for shifting of the Central Jail from the core area of the city.
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Chief Minister said Financial Commissioner Planning and Development Department and Commissioner Secretary Industries and Commerce Department will coordinate the skill training of the jail inmates by establishing institutionalised Skill Development Centres in various jails.
Efforts should be made to match the trades, in which training is imparted, to the needs of the society so that on release from prisons these individuals can not only adjust in the society but also get gainful employment, she added.
She said some of the jail inmates can be also trained in making furniture and furnishings and if they are able to produce quality products, the government departments will be asked to make maximum purchases from such jails which have developed the capacity for large-scale production.
She said the period spent by under-trials and convicts in jails must be utilised to the benefit of the inmates.
Responding to the plea of Director General of Prisons that there were not many qualified teachers and Vocational Training Instructors available in jails, she asked the Commissioner Secretary Education and Secretary Technical Education to provide the necessary staff to all the jails and also design a sustainable and workable educational curriculum for the inmates.
Mehbooba also called for providing adequate medical, correctional and supervisory staff to all the jails, besides organising regular health awareness programmes in the jails.
Earlier, the Director General of Prisons S P Vaid, through a detailed power point presentation, informed the CM about the status of various jails, the number of inmates, infrastructure requirement and other issues related to prison management.
The DG Prisons said there are presently 14 jails in J&K, out of which nine are in Jammu and five in Kashmir with a total lodging capacity of 3031 inmates. He said 3 new jails are coming up at Pulwama, Bhaderwah and Kargil.