LAHORE, Oct 2: The Lahore High Court on Wednesday directed the Punjab chief secretary to submit comments on a writ petition against the denial of fundamental human rights to under-trial prisoners.
Petitioner’s counsel M.D. Tahir submitted that under-trial prisoners were neither birds nor animals, but as many as 80 of them were stuffed in the prisoners van meant for 30 after being taken out from jails for production in courts. They were lodged in the “bakhshi khanas” on reaching the courts, but had to remain in the vans at places like Gujrat and Kharian where prisoner’s lock-ups had not been built in the court compounds.
He submitted that he was an official visitor to the jails and had been informed by the under-trial prisoners that they had to remain stuffed in the vans for eight to 10 hours continuously as the police officials usually took their remand without taking them out of these vans. Their relatives had to bribe the policemen to meet them outside the courts or to allow them to answer the call of the nature.
He prayed the court to direct the government to respect the human rights of prisoners and build lock-ups with toilets and drinking water facilities in the compounds of all the courts. The prisoners should be allowed to use toilets in the court compounds where lockups did not exist.
AMENDED PETITION: Justice Saeed Akhtar of the Lahore High Court will hear the amended writ petition against the Legal Framework Order from Thursday.
The case came up before the judge after being transferred from the court of Justice M. Ijaz Buttar by Chief Justice Iftikhar Husain Chaudhry on Wednesday.
The judge decided to start the hearing of the case on Thursday on the request of the petitioner Pakistan Lawyers Forum counsel, A.K. Dogar.
BAILED OUT: A Division Bench of the Lahore High Court comprising Justices Tassadaq Husain Jilani and Asif Saeed Khosa on Wednesday granted bail to Pakistan People’s Party leader Ahad Malik.
The counsel for petitioner submitted that the National Accountability Bureau had arrested him in connection with a Rs2.8 million loan procured from the Punjab Cooperative Board. The petitioner had paid back Rs1.6 million in the past and the remaining Rs1.2 million afterwards.
The court accepted his bail application and ordered his release on furnishing a bond of Rs500,000 with sureties in the like amount.





























