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Ensure effective implementation of advisory for terminally ill prisoners HC tells Maharashtra govt



    Mumbai, Dec 17 (PTI) The Bombay High Court has asked the Maharashtra government to ensure the effective implementation of a 2010 advisory concerning the treatment of terminally ill prisoners which recommends medical bail or house arrest for inmates suffering from such diseases.
    A division bench of Justices Revati Mohite Dere and Prithviraj Chavan on Monday said they visited the Yerwada central prison in Pune on Sunday and met with prisoners, particularly women inmates, and inspected the condition there.
    The bench referred to an advisory issued by the Union Ministry of Home Affairs in August 2010 on the policy for the treatment of terminally ill prisoners/inmates.
    As per the advisory, any prisoner who is identified as suffering from any terminal illness shall be either granted bail on medical grounds, parole, furlough, or placed in house arrest or the custody of family members.
    The advisory also says that in such cases, special medical care could be given to such persons in the prison itself.
    The court directed the Maharashtra government to file a detailed affidavit on the issue and the implementation of the advisory.
    The HC was hearing a petition filed by one Arun Bhelke, who along with his wife Kanchan Nanaware was an undertrial and lodged in the Yerwada jail after being arrested in 2014 under provisions of the stringent Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA).
    As per the plea, Nanaware was diagnosed with a terminal illness in 2020 but failed to get medical bail.
    When she approached the high court for bail on medical grounds, she was referred to a medical board, which recommended a 'heart and lung' transplant.
    However, by the time any order could be passed, she died in January 2021, after spending nearly seven years in prison.
    Her husband subsequently petitioned the HC, seeking directions to the state to scrupulously implement the 2010 advisory and also provisions of the Maharashtra Prisons (Review of Sentences) Rules, so that in future no other prisoner suffers despite being terminally ill.
    Senior advocate Gayatri Singh, appearing for Bhelke, told the court that the rules empower the superintendent of prisons to hand over a terminally ill prisoner to his/her relatives on certain conditions to allow such persons to spend their last days among their family members.
    The bench said it would hear the plea further in January 2025.

(This story has not been edited by THE WEEK and is auto-generated from PTI)