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Fugitive businessman Vijay Mallya might not be lodged in the same cell as shown in the eight-minute video submitted by the Indian government in the Westminster Court in London.
He will not be given any special privileges or treated as a high-security prisoner and kept in isolation, said Rajwardhan, Special Inspector General (Prisons) in Maharashtra in an exclusive telephonic conversation with The Quint. Rather, he will be lodged with other inmates in Barrack number 12 of the Arthur Road Jail.
Mallya had earlier filed an application in the London Court, saying that Indian jails were overcrowded with poor hygiene conditions, as his defence for not being extradited to India.
When asked whether Mallya will be considered a high-security prisoner and segregated from other prisoners, Rajwardhan said Mallya could not be considered one because “a high-security prisoner is a terrorist or a violent prisoner, somebody who has committed a violent kind of a crime”.
He further added that Mallya is an economic offender, and so cannot be considered a high-security prisoner.
Rajwardhan became tight-lipped when asked about the eight-minute video submitted by the Indian Government to the Westminster Court in London on Arthur Road Jail’s condition.
The eight-minute video submitted by the CBI to the London court, as reported by CNN-IBN, shows Barrack number 12 of the jail, where Mallya will be lodged, situated in an independent building. It shows six important features of the cell:
According to former IG (Prisons) Meeran Chadha Borwankar, Mallya will be considered a high-security prisoner and will be initially lodged in isolation if extradited to India, she says.
But when she was asked pointedly whether the Prison Manual allows 300 square feet for a prisoner who is kept in isolation, she said:
The eight-minute video in Barrack number 12 of Arthur Road Jail shows a seemingly unused bathroom, with colourful tiles and a WC.
The first question that comes to mind when watching it is – is this for real? Do Indian jails actually have such clean and hygienic bathrooms?
When we asked the same question to Special IG (Prisons) Rajwardhan, he said the video was shot by the CBI in a jail, which means that it exists. As far the colourful tiles are concerned, only the Public Works Department can answer that question, he said.
Borwankar, when asked, was more forthcoming. She said:
Now that the IG Prisons has clarified that Mallya will not, in fact, be kept in isolation as the CBI’s video implies, this leads to other questions:
- Did the Indian Government inform the London court of how many inmates will be lodged with Mallya in Barrack number 12?
- Did the Indian government also inform the London court about what kind of criminals will be lodged with Mallya?
- Does the cell shown in the video submitted to the London court – which has a pristine bathroom, decked up with seemingly new paint and tiles – give a realistic picture of the conditions in the Arthur Road Jail?
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