The document discusses the role and responsibilities of District and Sessions Judges regarding jail matters under Pakistani law. It aims to briefly establish the nexus with international conventions and treaties on prisoners' rights, and provide an in-depth study of the role of District and Sessions Judges in jail matters as prescribed by law. The document references several Pakistani acts related to prisons and prisoners, including the Prisons Act of 1894, and outlines various administrative hierarchies, segregation requirements for prisoners, offenses related to prisons, and punishments that can be administered by superintendents.
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Jail law presentation DSJ
1. 5/22/2016 1
By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
3. WHAT AM I AIMING AT?
1.Briefly establishing the nexus with
International Conventions & Treaties.
2.In depth study of the role ascribed by
Law to DSJ in Jail matters
3.I would not discuss Jail reforms & other
social economic matters pertaining to
Jails
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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Nexus with International Conventions &
Treaties
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
14. • No prisoner shall be subjected, even with his or her
consent, to any medical or scientific experimentation which
may be detrimental to health.
• Like torture and ill-treatment, enforced disappearances and
summary executions are completely prohibited.
• All law enforcement officials shall be fully informed and
educated about the prohibition of torture and ill treatment.
• .
UN Declarations in respect of prisoners
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
15. • Any statement made as a result of torture
shall not be invoked as evidence in any
proceedings
• Orders from a superior officer may not be
invoked as a justification of torture.
• Law enforcement officials may use force only
when it is strictly necessary
Evidentiary value of statement
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
16. • Persons deprived of their liberty shall be held
in places which are officially recognized as
places of custody.
• A detailed register shall be kept of every
person deprived of liberty.
• All prisoners shall be provided promptly with
written information about the regulations
which apply to them and on their rights and
obligations.
Notified jails only
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
17. • The families, legal representatives and, if
appropriate, diplomatic missions of prisoners
are to receive full information about the fact
of their detention and where they are held.
• All prisoners shall be offered a proper medical
examination and treatment as soon as
possible after admission.
Right to have access to family
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
18. • All persons deprived of their liberty shall be
treated with humanity and with respect for the
inherent dignity of the human person.
• All persons deprived of their liberty shall have the
right to an adequate standard of living, including
adequate food, drinking water, accommodation,
clothing and bedding.
• Accommodation for prisoners shall provide
adequate cubic content of air, floor space,
lighting, heating and ventilation.
Adequate standard of living
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
20. • Prisoners required to share sleeping
accommodation shall be carefully selected
and supervised at night.
• Adequate food and drinking water are human
rights
Supervised share accomodation
5/22/2016 20
By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
21. • All prisoners shall be provided with
wholesome and adequate food at the usual
hours and with drinking water available
whenever needed.
• Clothing as a component of the right to an
adequate standard of living is a human right.
Standard of living
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
22. • All prisoners not allowed to wear their own
clothing shall be provided with suitable clothing.
• There shall be facilities for keeping clothing clean
and in proper condition.
• All prisoners shall be provided with a separate
bed and clean bedding, with facilities for keeping
bedding clean.
• There must be facilities to wash and dry clothing
and bedding regularly
Preserving the dignity
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
23. • It is a basic requirement that all prisoners should be
given a medical examination as soon as they have been
admitted to a prison or place of detention.
• Decisions about a prisoner’s health should be taken
only on medical grounds by medically qualified people
• During their stay in a prison, insane and mentally ill
prisoners shall be supervised by a medical officer
• All prisoners shall have at least one hour’s daily
exercise in the open air if the weather permits
Health care
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
24. • Use of force, including use of firearms, to prevent
escape should only be applied when less extreme
means are insufficient to prevent the escape.
• Restraints may be used only as a precaution
against escape during transfer, for no longer than
strictly necessary, and provided that they are
removed when the prisoner appears
before a judicial or administrative authority; or on
medical grounds.
Least use of force
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
25. • Women prisoners shall not suffer
discrimination and shall be protected from all
forms of violence or exploitation.
• Women prisoners shall be detained separately
from male prisoners.
Segregated detentions
5/22/2016 25
By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
27. REGULATION III OF 1818, A REGULATION FOR THE CONFINEMENT
OF STATE PRISONERS
THE PRISONS ACT, 1894 (IX OF 1894)
THE PRISONERS ACT, 1900 (III OF 190)
THE PRISON RULES, 1978
Adopted by NWFP on
4.9.1985 renamed
NWFP Prison Rules, 1985
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
28. The Prisons Act, 1894.
• Defines Prisons, Cr & Civil Prisoner
• Administrative hierarchy
• Prescribes duties
• Defines offences & punishments
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
29. Civil Jail Act, 1874 not applicable to
KPK
Nothing in this Act shall apply to civil
jails in Sind and the Karachi Division,
and those jails shall continue to be
administered under the provisions of
section 9 to 16 (both inclusive) of
Bombay Act II of 1874, as amended by
subsequent enactments.
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
30. Administrative hierarchy
CHIEF HEAD WARDER
HEAD WARDER WARDER
DEPUTY SUPERITENDENT
ASSISTANT SUPERITENDENT
INSPECTOR GENERAL -- ASSISTANT IG
DIRECTOR (DEPUTY DIRECTOR) --- SUPERITENDENT JAIL
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
31. Legal Status of Nambadar, Sheen Posh etc
23. Convict Officers.— Prisoners
who have been appointed as
officers of prisons shall be
deemed to be public servants
within the meaning of the
Pakistan Penal Code
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
32. SEGREGATION OF PRISONERS
27. Separation of prisoners.— The requisitions of this Act with respect to the
separation of prisoners are as follows:-
(1) in a prison containing female as well as male prisoners, the females shall be
imprisoned in separate buildings, or separate parts of the same building, in such
manner as to prevent their seeing, or conversing or holding any intercourse with,
the male prisoners;
(2) in a prison where male prisoners under the age of twenty-one are confined,means
shall be provided for separating them altogether from the other prisoners and for
separating those of them who have arrived at the age of puberty from those who
have not;
(3) unconvicted criminal prisoners shall be kept apart from convicted criminal
prisoners; and
(4) civil prisoners shall be kept apart from criminal prisoners.
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
33. LEGALITY OF SELF HELP FOOD ETC
31. Maintenance of certain prisoners from
private sources.— A civil prisoner or an
unconvicted criminal prisoner shall be permitted
to maintain himself, and to purchase, or
receive from private sources at proper hours,
food, clothing, bedding or other necessaries,
but subject to examination and to such rules
as may be approved by the Director of Prisons.
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
34. RELEASE OF JUDGMENT DEBTOR
33. Supply of clothing and bedding to civil and unconvicted
criminal prisoners.— (1) every civil prisoner and unconvicted
criminal prisoner unable to provide himself with sufficient
clothing and bedding shall be supplied by the Superintendent
with such clothing and bedding as may be necessary.
(2) When any civil prisoner has been committed to prison in
execution of a decree in favour of a private person, such
person, or his representative, shall, within forty-eight hours
after the receipt by him of a demand in writing pay to the
Superintendent the cost of the clothing and bedding so
supplied to the prisoner; and in default of such payment the
prisoner may be released.
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
35. LEGAL ASSISTANT ACCESSIBILITY
40. Visits to civil and unconvicted criminal
prisoners.— Due provision shall be made for
the admission, at proper times and under proper
restrictions, into every prison of persons with
whom civil or unconvicted criminal prisoners may
desire to communicate, care being taken that so
far as may be consistent with the interests of
justice, prisoners under trial may see their duly
qualified legal advisers without the presence of
any other person.
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
37. 42. Penalty for introduction or removal of prohibited articles into or
from prison and Communication with prisoners.— Whoever, contrary
to any rule under section 59 introduces or removes or attempts by any
means whatever to introduce or remove, into or from any prison, or
supplies or attempts to supply to any prisoner outside the limits of a
prison, any prohibited article, and every officer of a prison who,
contrary to any such rule, knowingly suffers any such article to be
introduced into or removed from any prison, to be possessed by any
prisoner, or to be supplied to any prisoner outside the limits of a
prison, and whoever, contrary to any such rules, communicates or
attempts to communicate with any prisoner, and whoever abets any
offence made punishable by this section, shall, on conviction before a
Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six
months, or to fine not exceeding two hundred rupees, or to both.
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
38. Power to arrest a person
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
38
43. Power to arrest for offence under section 42.—
When any person, in the presence of any officer of a
prison, commits any offence specified in the last
foregoing section, and refuses on demand of such
officer to state his name and residence, or gives a
name or residence which such officer knows, or has
reason to believe, to be false, such officer may arrest
him, and shall without unnecessary delay make him
over to a Police-officer, and thereupon such Police-
officer shall proceed as if the offence had been
committed in his presence.
39. 45. Prison-offences:
1) such wilful disobedience to any regulation of the prison as shall have been declared
by rules made under section 59 to be a prison-offence;
(2) any assault or use of criminal force;
(3) the use of insulting or threatening language;
(4) immoral or indecent or disorderly behaviour;
(5) wilfully disabling himself from labour;
(6) contumaciously refusing to work;
(7) filing, cutting, altering or removing handcuffs, fetters or bars without due authority;
(8) wilful idleness or negligence at work by any prisoner sentenced to rigorous
imprisonment.
(9) wilful mismanagement of work by any prisoner sentenced to rigorous imprisonment;
(10) wilful damage to prison-property;
(11) tampering with or defacing history-tickets, records or documents;
(12) receiving, possessing or transferring any prohibited article;
(13) feigning illness;
(14) wilfully bringing a false accusation against any officer or prisoner;
(15) omitting or refusing to report, as soon as it comes to his knowledge, the occurrence
of any fire, any plot or conspiracy, any escape, attempt or preparation to escape,
and any attack or preparation for attack upon any prisoner or prison-official; and
(16) conspiring to escape, or to assist in escaping, or to commit any other of the offences
aforesaid
5/22/2016 39
By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
40. 46. Punishment of such offences.— The
Superintendent may examine any person
touching any such offence, and determine
thereupon, and punish such offence by-
(1) A formal warning:
Explanation.— A formal warning shall mean
a warning personally addressed to a
prisoner by the Superintendent and
recorded in the punishment book and on
the prisoner’s history ticket;
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
41. (2) change of labour to some more irksome or severe form or such
period as may be prescribed by rules made by the Provincial
Government;
(3) hard labour for a period not exceeding seven days in the case of
convicted criminal prisoners not sentenced to rigorous imprisonment;
(4) such loss of privileges admissible under the remission system for the
time being in force as may be prescribed by rules made by the Provincial
Government
(5) the substitution of gunny or other coarse fabric for clothing of other
material, not being woollen, for a period which shall not exceed three
months;
(6) imposition of handcuffs of such pattern and weight, in such manner
and for such period, as may be prescribed by rules made by the
Provincial Government;
(7) imposition of fetters of such pattern and weight, in such manner and
for such period, as may be prescribed by rules made by the Provincial
Government
(8) separate confinement for any period not exceeding three months;5/22/2016 41
By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
42. (9) penal diet, that is, restriction of diet in such
manner and subject to such conditions regarding
labour as may be prescribed by the Provincial
Government Provided that such restriction of diet
shall in no case be applied to a prisoner for more than
ninety-six consecutive hours, and shall not be
repeated except for a fresh offence nor until after an
interval of one week;
(10) cellular confinement for any period not
exceeding fourteen days: Provided that after each
period of cellular confinement an interval of not less
duration than such period must elapse before the
prisoner is again sentenced to cellular or solitary
confinement:5/22/2016 42
By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
44. 5/22/2016
By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
44
45. CONFINEMENT
Solitary Cellular Separate
Rule 638
Solitary confinement
means such
confinement with or
without labour as
entirely secludes the
prisoner both from
sight of and
communication with,
other prisoners.
S 46: Cellular
confinement
means such
confinement with
or without labour
as
entirely secludes a
prisoner from
communication
with, but not from
sight of, other
prisoners
S 46 Separate
confinement means such
confinement with or
without labour as
secludes a prisoner from
communication with, but
not from sight of, other
prisoners, and allows him
not less than one hour’s
exercise per diem and to
have his meals in
association with one or
more other prisoners;
5/22/2016 45
By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
46. Return of warrant for correction
Rule 28.-- The Superintendent shall
return the warrant for correction to the
officer who issued it, if by any error or
omission; the warrant is defective in form or
otherwise irregular.
5/22/2016 46
By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
47. Superintendent not to be refuses admittance to a
prisoner whose warrant is defective
Rule 30.-- The Superintendent should not refuse to
admit a prisoner in whose warrant or order omissions
and irregularities exist, but should draw the
immediate attention of the Magistrate concerned to
the defects and ask for rectification at once sending at
the same time a copy of his letter to the District
Magistrate for his information. However, the
Superintendent is justified in refusing to receive or
detain a prisoner in prison on a warrant to which is
affixed a signature by means of a seal or stamp. But
he should ordinarily adopt the procedure detailed in
Rule 295/22/2016 47
By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
48. 5/22/2016
By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
48
49. Rule 105.-- (i) On receipt of In the event of the final orders of the
government to carry out execution, the Superintendent Jail shall appoint a day
for execution not more than a week later than the date on which such orders
actually reach him irrespective of the date fixed by the Session Judges on the
black warrants, so as to permit, of the usual antecedent formalities, e.g.,
summoning of relative and friends for last interview, the making of will, etc.,
being observed in due order and without precipitation. The date so fixed should
be intimated to Government when acknowledging the order of execution.
request the Trial Court concerned to fix a date for the execution of the sentence
of death, in accordance with paragraph 39 of chapter 24-B of the High Court
rules and orders; Vol.-III.
(ii) The date so fixed shall be intimated to the Provincial / The Federal
Government through the fastest means of communications
(iii) The Superintendent of jail shall make arrangements for the summoning
of relatives and friends of the condemned prisoner for the last interview, making
of will, if any, and such like other purposes.
Rule 106.-- On the morning of any execution, the Superintendent shall,
before proceeding to the cell of the condemned prisoner, enter his office and
assure himself that there is no communication awaiting him connected with the
execution
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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By Mohammad Zeb Khan, District &
Sessions Judge/ Director Instructions KP
Judicial Academy
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