The Calcutta High Court on Thursday was told that women prisoners in West Bengal were getting pregnant while under custody. In 2018, the high court appointed Advocate Tapas Kumar Bhanja as amicus curiae in a suo motu motion on overcrowding in prisons.
Bhanja on Thursday told the division bench comprising Chief Justice TS Sivagnanam and Justice Supratim Bhattacharya that 196 babies were said to have been living in different jails across West Bengal, the Bar and Bench reported.
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The case pertains to prison reforms and correctional homes in the State of West Bengal. The amicus curiae also told the court that on his visit to a correctional home he found one pregnant woman and 15 children born in the prison.
Taking a serious view on the submissions, the bench said that the matter would be placed before a two-judge bench hearing criminal cases on Monday.
According to the report, the high court bench recoded Bhanja's submission that woman prisoners are getting pregnant while in custody and at present there are as many as 196 babies staying in different prisons of West Bengal. Bhanja has further suggested to the court that the male employees of correctional homes should be barred from entering enclosures holding women prisoners.
According to prison rules, a child of less than six years of age can stay with mother if she is arrested.
The National Crime Records Bureau released its Prison Statistics India (2022) Report in 2023.
Acoording to the PSI report by NCRB, India has only 34 women jails. There are total 1,330 prisons in the country. Out of the 5,73,220 prisoners in India, 5,49,351 were male prisoners, and 23,772 were female prisoners and 97 were transgender.