The jail manual was last modified in 1925.
Young offenders aged between 18 and 21 will be separately housed from notorious criminals to prevent them from mingling with hardened criminals and can be reformed as part of the rehabilitation programme for prisoners, home department officials said.
The jail superintendents were also directed to take photographs and fingerprints of all the inmates and get their voice recorded for preparing a complete data base of the prisoners.
Announcing that all the 54 jails across the state would be computerised, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar at a review meeting of the state home (Prison) department yesterday asked the jail administration to install modern gadgets through which prisoners could get information about their court appearance dates simply by touching a screen.
The district magistrates were asked to hold an interactive meeting - 'Bandi Darbar'- every two months for redressing their grievances, the officials said.
An emergency squad will also be constituted in jails to train inmates to face emergency.
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The CM also directed the IG(prison) to revise the rate of remuneration of prisoners against tasks carried out during their incarceration, fill the vacant posts and grant promotions to jail staff, the officials said.
Kumar stressed on installation of CCTV and advance gadgets for security in and around the jails and other infrastructure like night vision devices, central control room and video conferencing system.