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CPI's D Raja welcomes court judgement directing Maoists to be treated as political prisoners | Communist Party of India (CPI) leader D Raja has welcomed a Kolkata court's declaration that nine suspected Naxalites arrested by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) in connection with the CPI (Maoist) arms manufacturing case are 'political prisoners', saying prisoners
must be treated with dignity as human beings and their requirements must be understood
when they are kept in prison. Raja said there is point in what the Kolkata court
has said. "Definitely, they should be treated as political prisoners. One may
agree with their politics or may not agree with their politics, that is why the
National Investigation Agency has taken up the case against them. But they are
suspects and they are prisoners," he said. The CPI leader pointed out that India
is a modern civilized nation where there are talks about jail and police reforms.
"When prisoners are kept in prison, they must be treated with dignity as human
beings and their requirements must be understood because after all it is an access
to newspaper or television, access to some good water. These are all minimum requirements
of any human being whether they are in prison or outside prison," he added. Several
jailed Maoists will now be entitled to privileges of a separate cell, home-cooked
food, access to newspapers, books and other reading material, meeting with relatives
and advocates and greater freedom inside jail compared to other prisoners. The
NIA is likely to challenge the verdict of the Kolkata court, as the prisoners
include CPI (Maoist) technical committee head and the man behind the outfit's
rocket launcher factories, Sadula Ramakrishna alias RK. This order was pronounced
in response to a petition filed before the Kolkata sessions court by the nine
accused arrested by NIA. The petitioners sought status of political prisoners
even as the NIA opposed their pleas. The status was granted under the West Bengal
Correctional Services Act, 1992. According to the Act, political prisoners are
those who are arrested or convicted on a charge of having committed or attempting
to commit aiding or abetting the commissions of any political offence. It is applicable
even if the person is charged under the Indian Penal Code. The law further says
that anyone who commits or allegedly commits an offence during a political or
democratic movement with an exclusive political objective, free from personal
greed or motive, is entitled to political prisoner status. Even charges of waging
war against the nation cannot prevent an accused from being granted the status.
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