Will Sarabjeet be spared the gallows under Pak Govt.’s plans to commute death sentences?

Islamabad, Sep.17 (ANI): The Pakistan government is considering commuting death sentences, but such a step may not help the cause of Sarabjeet Singh, the Indian inmate who has been awarded a death sentence by a Lahore anti-terrorism court in October 1991.

Interior Advisor Rehman Malik said the government has sent a draft to the law division seeking legal opinion on the proposal to commute death sentences.

Rehman, however, said that even if the proposal is accepted there would be no mercy for terrorists.

“They (terrorists) will have to face the death penalty,” The Dawn quoted Malik, as saying.

According to an estimate there are 7000 death inmates in Pakistan at present.

Pakistan security agencies have maintained that Singh had admitted that he was sent to Pakistan to carry out serial bomb blasts in Lahore, Faislabad, and Kasur, and was trained by the Indian Army, and the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW).

Singh was awarded the death sentence by a Lahore anti-terrorism court in October 1991.

He challenged the verdict in the Supreme Court, however, the apex court quashed his appeal in September, 2005, saying that the review petition was not filed within the time period as mentioned in the law.

In March 2006, a two member Supreme Court bench dismissed Singh’s petition against his conviction in the Lahore’s Yakki Gate bomb blast in 1990.

Singh has been languishing in Pakistan jails for the last 28 years, as Pakistan has stonewalled release even on humanitarian grounds, despite continuous efforts by Indian diplomatic channels. (ANI)

Abandoned by children, inmates of an old-age perform ‘Shraadh’ in Bhopal

Bhopal, Sep.10 (ANI): Abandoned by their own children, many elderly people at an old-age home in Bhopal, performed ‘Shraadh’ for themselves during the ongoing ‘Pitrapaksha’.

As per Hindu tradition, one’s children or family members perform the Shraadh, the ritual of remembering the deceased.

These elderly inmates took the unusual step, as they realised there was no one in their families to perform this ritual.

“They (children) will not do the salvation ritual for us after our death. We are doing it for ourselves. If today they are treating us in this manner, we don’t know what they will do after our death. What can we say?… There is no one to see us. There is no one to listen to our plight… We will die like this here one day,” said Murari Lal Saxena, inmate of Anand Dham old-age-home.

By performing their own ‘shraadh’ rituals, the elderly said they were preparing for their next life.

Parmanad Agrawal, whose family members have died, said in this age and time he couldn’t trust his relatives to do ‘Shraadh’ for him.

“I’m doing my own salvation ritual. So that I don’t suffer in my next life,” said Parmanad Agrawal, an inmate of Anand Dham, the old age home.

Meanwhile, the in-charge of the old-age home Madhuri Mishra said that the inmates did the rituals out of a sense of compulsion.

“All elderly members were worried and in a sad mood. They said since their children have left them in an old age home then why not do their own post-death ritual even if they were still alive. This will leave no burden on their sons after their death. The elderly performed the rituals in the early morning,” said Madhuri Mishra, In-charge, Anand Dham Old-Age-Home.

Hindus believe in reincarnation, or in the cycle of birth. They believe that the body changes with every birth but the soul remains the same.

According to the Hindu philosophy, this birth and death cycle can be broken and the soul can be liberated by performing “Pind Daan” (rituals for dead).

During ‘Pitrapaksha’, children perform the ceremony and pray that the souls of their ancestors should rest in peace. By Ram Chand Sahu(ANI)

Obama’s book deemed dangerous for prisoners, could jeopardise national security

London, July 11 (ANI): An American al-Qaeda member, who is serving a 30-year sentence for conspiring to commit various terrorist acts including the murder of then President George W Bush, was banned from reading two books written by Barack Obama, as they were “potentially detrimental to national security.”

Ahmed Omar Abu Ali, an inmate at America’s most secure federal prison, was informed that specific pages were objectionable, singling out a page in ‘Dreams from My Father’ and page 22 in ‘The Audacity of Hope ‘.

Abu Ali requested last year before Obama’s election to read his biographical ‘Dreams from My Father’ and the more policy-oriented ‘The Audacity of Hope’.

Citing guidance from the FBI, the authorities at the Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado, decided that both books contained information that could jeopardise national security.

Officials mentioned specific pages, but not passages that were objectionable. Half of them were in a chapter devoted to foreign affairs, The Telegraph reports.

Abu Ali later went on hunger strike in protest against his treatment, and prison officials said on Thursday that the books were subsequently deemed appropriate following a review of their contents.

However, evidence of their original ban has been included in court papers relating to Abu Ali’s re-sentencing hearing next month.

Joshua Dratel, his lawyer, said the rejection was an example of the harsh conditions imposed on inmates at the Supermax prison.

The rejections, as well as other restrictions on family visits, prompted a hunger strike by Abu Ali that has since ended, according to Dratel.

Inmates at the supposedly impregnable prison are usually kept in their cells in solitary confinement for 22 or 23 hours a day. (ANI)

Madoff hires prison consultant to help him find best possible jail

London, July 5 (ANI): Bernard Madoff has hired a veteran prison consultant to help him to find the best possible jail in which to serve his 150-year sentence for Wall Street’s biggest fraud.

After his sentencing this week Madoff, now Prisoner No 1727-054, met Herb Hoelter, of the National Centre for Institutions and Alternatives, whose previous clients include the jailed Sotheby’s chairman Alfred Taubman and the financiers Michael Milken and Ivan Boesky.

The draconian maximum sentence imposed by the judge means that Madoff, 71, will be assigned to a tougher category of prison than most white-collar criminals, The Times reported.

He could be forced to mingle with murderers, rapists, drug-dealers and white supremacist gangs with a hatred of Jews. Madoff is Jewish.

He could even find himself incarcerated with terrorists in the infamous “Supermax” jail in Florence, Colorado, the paper reported.

“He was incredibly disappointed. He knew he was going to spend the rest of his life in prison. I don’t think that was ever an issue,” Mr Hoelter told The Times. “But it’s patently unfair to cast him as a symbol of all evil.”

Federal convicts are assigned to minimum, low, medium, high-security prison, or even the sole Supermax facility, by the US Bureau of Prisons using a score-card known as Form BP-337 to calculate an inmate’s “Security Point Total”.

A first-time non-violent white-collar criminal convicted in a US federal court would normally qualify for incarceration at a minimum-security “prison camp” with easygoing rules and no perimeter fence.

But the length of Madoff’s jail term means that he has no hope at all of going to one of them.

“Independent of the length of his sentence, he would score out as a minimum-security inmate,” The Times quoted Hoelter, as saying. “But because of the length of his sentence, they apply a ‘public safety factor’ and would never put him in a minimum security facility.” (ANI)

Pak death row inmate Sarabjit Singh gets a new lawyer

Lahore, June 27 (ANI): Indian national Sarabjit Singh, who has been on death row in Pakistan since 1991 for his alleged involvement in bomb attacks in 1990, has been given a new lawyer to represent him.

Lawyer Owif Sheikh will now fight Sarabjit’s case and will be filing an appeal to the court.

This move comes after Sarabjit’s lawyer Rana Abdul Hamid failed to appear for Sarabjit’s hearing on June 24.

Sheikh is expected to file an appeal on the grounds that the previous lawyer was not present at the time of the court’s decision to reject Sarabjit’s appeal. Sheikh will also request the government to abolish the death penalty on humanitarian grounds.

Sarabjit has been on death row since he was convicted for alleged involvement in four bomb blasts in 1990 that killed 14 people.

He was to be hanged on April one last year, but authorities in Pakistan put off his execution indefinitely after Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani intervened in the matter. (ANI)

Longer sentences for future crimes deter potential criminals

Washington, May 19 (ANI): Former prisoners are less likely to return to jail if they expect longer sentences for future crimes, according to a study.

The study-conducted by researchers from the University of Naples Parthenope, France-based National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), and University of Bergamo-used a recently passed Italian law as a natural experiment.

“This paper contributes to the literature providing evidence that potential criminals do respond to a change in prison sentences,” write the study’s authors.

They say that Italy’s Collective Clemency Bill, which was passed in 2006, presents a unique opportunity to study the deterrent effect of prison sentences.

They point out that when the clemency bill was passed, it immediately released thousands of prisoners who had three years or less left on their sentences. The remainder of each prisoner’s sentence was suspended, but not forgiven.

According to the authors, the law stipulated that a former inmate who commits a new crime within five years will have the suspended portion of his sentence reinstated and added to the sentence for the new crime.

Consequently, a repeat offender can expect extra jail time equal to the suspended portion of his sentence-anywhere from one month to three years.

The researchers used government data to look at the recidivism rates of the hese former inmates for the first seven months after their release, and found that those with longer suspended sentences-and therefore longer expected sentences for new crimes-were less likely to be re-arrested than those with shorter suspended sentences.

“These results corroborate the general theory of deterrence,” the authors write.

Their calculations suggested, “increasing the expected sentence by 50 percent should reduce recidivism rates by about 35 percent in seven months.”

However, even a small increase in the expected sentence was enough to deter recidivism at least a little, the team found.

The data suggest that a one-month increase in expected sentence resulted in a 1.3 percent lower probability of returning to prison.

The deterrent effect was consistent across age groups, and among men and women, though 95 percent of the sample was male.

“This means that a policy a commuting actual sentences in expected sentences significantly reduces recidivism. A mass release of prisoners can be effective in reducing their propensity of re-committing crimes if, when a released individual gets convicted of a new crime, his normal sentence is increased by the time that was pardoned because of the early release,” Dr. Vertova says.

The researchers, however, write that one important exception to the deterrent effect was that recidivism rates among those whose original crime was more serious were essentially unaffected by the length of their suspended sentence, which suggests that “more dangerous inmates are not deterred.”

They also caution that their results only measure deterrence on those who have already served time in jail.

“Indeed, it is not clear whether these results can be to individuals who have never received prison treatment,” they noted.

However, despite the limitations, the study does provide real-world evidence that “individuals vary their criminal activity in response to a change in prison sentences,” the authors write.

The study has been reported in the Journal of Political Economy. (ANI)

Abandoned children back in Germany after pizzeria stranding

Olpe, Germany – Three young children – abandoned in an Italian pizzeria after their mother and her companion ran out of cash – arrived home Friday in Germany, where they have been made wards of court, authorities in the district of Olpe said.

Two child protection officials from Olpe, east of Cologne, had travelled the day before to Aosta in Italy to pick them up.

The German authorities said the boys, 10 months and 6 years old, and the girl, 4, were unharmed. The authorities had said earlier they would not be announcing the return in advance, since the news media might otherwise stake out airports to film the children.

The mother, 26, and her male companion, 24, were located in woods near Aosta on Thursday.

They explained that with no more money, they had considered themselves unable any longer to care for the children, whose biological father is serving a prison sentence for a fatal assault on the couple’s fourth child.

The mother was released by Italian police, but her new partner, a prison inmate who had failed to return to his German jail from two days’ furlough, remained in Italian custody Friday.

Prosecutors in the city of Siegen said they would soon apply for the man’s extradition to Germany so he could be returned to jail. (dpa)

When Jack Tweed met ‘naked’ Boy George in jail shower

London, Apr 30 (ANI): Looks like Jack Tweed is having a tough time facing another celebrity inmate in prison-he fled from jail showers with lightning speed after three encounters with naked gay star Boy George.

The 21-year-old was taken aback when he saw the Culture Club icon in the wash block of the nick where they are both serving sentences.nd shy Jack, whose Big Brother star wife Jade Goody died of cancer last month, had repeated encounters with beefy George after he was sent to cushy Edmunds Hill jail in Suffolk.

“Jack isn’t exactly the most comfortable person when it comes to getting attention from other men. As soon as he saw Boy George was standing there naked having a wash he was gobsmacked,” The Sun quoted a pal as saying.

He added: “He grew up listening to George’s records but never imagined the first time he met him he would be stark naked in a prison shower.”

According to sources, Jack twice went to the showers only to find the 1980s icon already in there wiping himself down.

He had a fleeting eye contact with Boy George, real name George O’Dowd, before he turned around and fled.

And the third time he went into the changing room, Boy George was getting undressed for his morning wash.

A pal said: “Jack knew what Boy George was in jail for and didn’t want to take any chances. The first time he saw him he just turned white and legged it.”

At 6ft, George, 47, is believed to be an intimidating figure for young prisoners at the jail.e was jailed at the Category C nick for 15 months for falsely imprisoning a male escort, shackling him to a bed and beating him with a chain.

On the other hand, Jack was moved there from tough Chelmsford Jail in Essex after being sentenced to 12 weeks for assaulting a cabbie. (ANI)

Latvian priest detained for smuggling phone in cake for prisoner

Riga – A priest was arrested in the Latvian capital Riga on Monday for allegedly helping to smuggle a mobile phone hidden inside a traditional Russian Easter cake into prison, the Baltic News Service reported.

The prison chaplain reportedly passed the celebratory “Kulich” pastry to an inmate at Riga Central Prison along with six eggs and an Easter card on behalf of a relative of the convict, according to information released by the Baltic state’s prison service.

Russian Easter cake is traditionally baked for Orthodox Easter, which fell on Sunday and was celebrated by many of Latvia’s large Russian minority.

Usually, ingredients include raisins, nuts, honey and sour cream.

A scan of the items revealed the presence of the contraband communicator. Criminal proceedings have been launched against the chaplain for smuggling illegal items to prison inmates. (dpa)

GITMO inmate is first to give an interview from inside

London, Apr.15 (ANI): A Guantanamo inmate captured in Afghanistan at the age of 14 has become the first to give an interview from inside the camp.

Chad terror suspect Al-Guarani is one of a number of Guantanamo prisoners whose release has been ordered by an American judge. Evidence that he had fought with al-Qaeda in Afghanistan was found to be “unreliable”.

According to The Telegraph, Al-Guarani spoke to a former Guantanamo inmate who works for al-Jazeera, the international Arabic television channel.

Al-Guarani said he had refused to leave his cell because he “not been granted his rights”, such as to interact with other inmates and eat “normal food”.

A group of six soldiers wearing protective gear and helmets came into the cell, he said.

“They had a thick rubber or plastic baton they beat me with. They emptied out about two canisters of tear gas on me. After I stopped talking, and tears were flowing from my eyes, I could hardly see or breathe. They then beat me again to the ground. One of them held my head and beat it against the ground. I started screaming to his senior ‘See what he’s doing, see what he’s doing’ [but] his senior started laughing and said ‘He’s doing his job’, said al Guarani.

“He broke one of my front teeth. Of course they didn’t film the blood, they filmed my back so it doesn’t show.”

Journalists who visit the Guantanamo Bay facility in Cuba have to sign a document agreeing not to speak to the prisoners.

He is currently held in Camp Iguana, a transitional camp for those whose release has been ordered where they are given greater privileges, including the telephone calls.

Amnesty International says that at least four Guantanamo captives were under 18 when they were captured, and some were as young as 13. (ANI)

Inmate’s chopped up body found in western Mexican jail

Mexico City – An inmate who was serving time for drug trafficking was murdered and chopped up in pieces in a prison in the western Mexican town of Uruapan, authorities in the state of Michoacan said Monday.

The guards at the prison, some 400 kilometres west of Mexico City, noticed the man’s absence when they went through the list of inmates after visiting hours Sunday afternoon, a spokesman for the Michoacan public prosecutor’s office told dpa.

Following a search of several hours, the remains were found inside plastic bags inside trash cans near a volleyball court.

The authorities were investigating to find the killers.

More than 7,000 people have been killed in Mexico since the beginning of 2008 in incidents linked to drug trafficking, either as violence between various drug cartels or in clashes between the cartels and Mexico’s security forces.

Farrah Fawcett’s son arrested for drug possession

Washington, Apr 6 (ANI): Veteran actress Farrah Fawcett’s son has been arrested for possessing drugs during a local jail visit.

Redmond O’Neal, whose father is actor Ryan O’Neal, was leaving a local jail after dropping off two friends, who were visiting an inmate there, when he had to undergo a routine security check.

The 24-year-old had reportedly admitted possessing drugs.

According to TMZ.com, the cops have arrested him on charges of possessing a controlled substance, and bringing narcotics into a secured jail facility.

He remains behind bars after his bail was set at 25,000 dollars, reports Contactmusic.

Meanwhile, Fawcett, who has been fighting cancer for almost three years, has been admitted to a Los Angeles hospital.

According to sources, the 62-year-old former star of ‘Charlie’s Angels’ is critical but stable. They also say that she is unconscious and has been hospitalised for days. (ANI)

Australian inmates may soon be given keys to their cells

Sydney, Mar. 27 (ANI): A company is planning to bid for the contracts of two Australia-based jails, in which inmates will have keys to their cells.

The research director of the UK-based Serco Group, Gary Sturgess will tell a New South Wales parliamentary inquiry that decency, not efficiency, is the main reason to privatize jails.

Sturgess, who advocated prisoners having a first-name basis with their jailers, says overseas experience shows that prisoners enjoy more privileges – including being given the keys to their own cells – in correctional systems, news.com.au reports.

Prisoners in private systems spend more time out of their cells and have far greater interaction with their jailers than in public provided jails, he added.

The results are safer jails and lower rates of re-offending, Sturgess claims.

Serco is expected to bid for the contracts to operate Cessnock prison in the Hunter Valley, and western Sydney located Parklea prison.

The company already operates one jail each in Victoria and Western Australia.

Sturgess’s submission argument to the upper house inquiry links private jail services to former British Prime Minister Tony Blair backed ‘decency agenda’.

“Contract prisons in the UK are more humane, partly because government demanded a higher standard when writing the original contracts, partly because price was not allowed to dominate the procurement process, and partly because the political and policy environment at the time when the market was first established was focused on the quality of prison life,” the Serco submission form said.

Earlier, inmates in low- and medium-security prisons in Britain had been allowed to hold duplicate keys to their own cells, leading to improved efficiency and decency.

“If (the warder) is the only one with a key, then every time a prisoner wants to go in and out of their cell you’ve got to send somebody to look at it. This way, the inmate has the dignity of having private space and a greater sense of security,” he said. (ANI)

Gujarat’s Sabarmati Prison promotes organic cultivation

Ahmedabad, Mar 23 (ANI): The Sabarmati Prison in Ahmedabad has launched an initiative to promote organic cultivation.

Taken up by Siddharth Jaiswal, an alumni of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad (IIM-A), with the help of prison authorities, the initiative is aimed at training prison inmates in organic cultivation.

Armed with an MBA in Agribusiness management, Jaiswal wanted to start organic farming in the state and got in touch with the prison authorities. They agreed to let him start the project in their premises.

Jaiswal is working with inmates to produce vermicompost, organic manure, which is excreta of earthworms rich in minerals and nutritional value.

He also plans to provide training to farmers and gardening enthusiasts in organic farming.

“We wanted to start a revolution in the state for organic cultivation which is sustainable in the long run. So this vermicompost, we caught this idea with the IG, Keshav Kumar, they already have 35 acres of land cultivation, but which is not organic. They use the conventional, normal, urea, fetilisers, so we want to develop the Sabarmati Jail as hub for organic cultivation,” said Jaiswal.

“We are giving training to farmers in organic cultivation plus this urban populace. Suppose they want to develop their own vegetables in the kitchen garden, we will be providing them the seeds, fertilisers, earthworms so that in their earthen pots they can grow organic vegetables,” Jaiswal added.

The inmates at the Sabarmati Prison are quite happy to learn the new cultivation technique which they feel is better than the conventional method of farming.

“Conventional farming uses a lot of chemical and other stuff. In organic farming, all these things are not required. I can use this technique to grow crops like wheat, cotton. I can utilise that to cultivate organic crops on my field,” said Raju, an inmate.

Initially, crops like wheat would be grown in the prison under the project and slowly they will pick up vegetable cultivation.

Jaiswal is also working on an annual crop table for organic cultivation in the prison. By Ami Sharma(ANI)

James Whitmore passes away at 87

London, Feb 8 (ANI): Veteran actor James Whitmore, who played American icons such as Harry Truman, Will Rogers and Theodore Roosevelt, has died aged 87.

Whitmore was twice nominated for Academy Awards – as best actor in 1976 for “Give ‘em Hell, Harry!,”, and as best supporting actor in 1950 for the war movie “Battleground.”

He also won an Emmy Award in 2000 for a guest-starring role on “The Practice,” as well as a Tony Award for “Command Decision.”

His more recent film credits include the Shawshank Redemption. He played an inmate who committed suicide, reports the BBC.

He died in Malibu, just northwest of Los Angeles, of lung cancer. (ANI)

Guantanamo Bay inmate free to roam in Britain

London, Feb 7 (ANI): Ethiopian Guantanamo Bay inmate Binyam Mohamed will be free to roam in Britain even though he has no right to reside here.

British Ministers are powerless to put him under house arrest because the US has dropped all charges against him.

The MI5 and anti-terror cops will be forced to watch him round the clock at a huge cost to tax- payers, The Sun reported.

Mohamed, 30, was given exceptional leave to remain in the UK in 2000, which expired in 2004. Now, government insiders admit that he would get permission to stay again even though he does not qualify.
Last night the Conservatives demanded answers from Foreign Secretary David Miliband.

Shadow foreign secretary William Hague wrote: “If Mohamed were to be returned now he would presumably have to reapply for leave to enter the country on his arrival. Can you confirm if this is the case and if preparations for lodging an application have been made?”

Miliband has admitted to MPs that Mohamed will be back in the UK “soon”. Insiders predict it will be this month.

The Sun reported that how Mohamed confessed to getting top-level terrorist training at an al-Qaeda camp in Afghanistan. He later insisted his confession was extracted under torture.

Mohamed left his family in the US to come to Britain on his own as a teenager. He lived on benefits and became hooked on drugs.

In 2000 he converted to Islam and in June 2001 he flew to Afghanistan. (ANI)

Al-Qaeda issues chilling video threat to UK on YouTube

London, Jan.26 (ANI): The Al-Qaeda has issued a chilling video threat to UK on YouTube.

According to The Sun, Osama bin Laden’s henchmen are seen ranting in the video that has footage of a black-clad gunman riddling the Union Flag with bullets.

The Stars and Stripes is also peppered – along with Israel’s flag. anatic Abu Hareth Muhammad al-Oufi – a former Guantanamo Bay inmate – vents his fury at the West while fondling an automatic rifle and brandishing a grenade.

The recording was posted on YouTube, which attracts up to 100 million visits a day. t was also downloaded to a number of extremist websites with hundreds of thousands of members.

Analysts said last night the message meant Britain is a revenge target for Israel’s war in Gaza.

“Al-Qaeda is clearly taking aim at Britain. This makes it obvious, if there was any doubt, we rank alongside the US and Israel at the top of their hate list,” the tabloid quoted terror expert Chris Dobson, as warning.

Online terror investigator Neil Doyle added: “There has been a noticeable increase in chatter about attacks at the UK.”(ANI)

UK prisoners converting to Islam for gang protection

London, Jan 13 (ANI): Prisoners at one of the Britain’s top security prisons are converting to Islam for protection because of a rife gang culture, an inspection report has said.

Inmates at Long Lartin prison said some were “becoming Muslim” because it is a “bigger gang,” The Telegraph reported.

Radical cleric Abu Qatada, once described as Osama bin Laden’s right-hand man in Europe, was held at the prison last year before being released on bail, which he went on to breach.

Similar concerns were raised in an inspection report in to Whitemoor Prison in Cambridgeshire last year, in which prison officers warned extremist Muslim prisoners are ganging up on others in an attempt to radicalise them.

Inspectors at Long Lartin, in Worcestershire, were told gang culture was widespread.

One inmate said: “Yes there is a gang culture here which is becoming an issue. A lot of people are becoming Muslim just because it’s a bigger gang.”

“There are issues with Muslim gangs wanting to overpower others,” another inmate said.

One inmate added: “Muslim gangs; if you have a problem with one, you have a problem with them all,” while a fourth inmate said: “People are converting to Islam for protection.”

The report, for chief inspector Anne Owers, also found drug debts have led to violence among prisoners, the paper said.

Inmates use phones to organise sales of class A drugs such as heroin, it said. (ANI)