"What is this happening? People are languishing in jails and there is problem of overcrowding of jails also. Look at the NALSA affidavit. It gives an indication what is going on," the apex court told the government.
A bench comprising Justices Madan B Lokur and Deepak Gupta referred to the figures and told Attorney General K K Venugopal that there were thousands of prisoners who were not released from jails by the states even after being granted bail or completing their sentences.
When the Attorney General told the bench that the Centre has been issuing advisories to the states from time to time to release such persons from jails but they were not doing it, the bench retorted: "You should stop advising the states if they are not listening to you.
"It cannot go on like this. You are giving advise to states and it is thrown into the waste basket."
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During the hearing, advocate Gaurav Agrawal, the amicus curiae in the matter, gave a note containing a proforma or questionnaire prepared by him for responses to be given by the states on various aspects of jail and prison management.
Agrawal told the court that he had circulated it to the Ministry of Home Affairs yesterday and would forward it to the state governments as well.
Venugopal said the concerned Ministry officers would render all assistance in finalising the questionnaire within 10 days and would also advise states to give assistance in this regard.
The court accepted the suggestions of Attorney General and asked three state -- Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh -- to file an affidavit within 10 days explaining why the recommendations of the district legal services authority and undertrial review committee to release persons from jails were not accepted.
"We are compelled to pass this order since we have been shown figures from the affidavit filed by NALSA which indicate a pretty shocking state of affairs," it said.
The top court
The bench is hearing a 2013 PIL on prevailing inhuman conditions prevailing in 1,382 prisons across the country.
On September 15, the court had passed an order on the issue of custodial deaths and said that custodial death was a crime and such incidents indicate the "apparent disdain" of the State to the life and liberty of prisoners.
It had also passed a slew of directions over unnatural deaths and on prison reforms across India.