Furlough in India

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Furlough (discretionary leave) for convicts

What the rules say

What does Furlough mean in the context of Indian prisoners? What is Sec 498-A of the IPC (Cruelty to the wife); Graphic courtesy: The Times of India, November 15, 2015

See graphic, 'What does Furlough mean in the context of Indian prisoners? What is Sec 498-A of the IPC (Cruelty to the wife)'

The Times of India, Sep 02 2015

Swati Deshpande

30-day parole to Dutt raises questions


Experts wonder whether jail authorities applied their mind in deciding his plea

Furlough is discretionary leave that convicts are allowed to enable re-integration with society upon their final release. It requires no specific reason. But parole is leave granted for a specific reason. It is not counted towards days served in prison, unlike furlough.

The jail manual requires a plea for parole to be processed within 45 days after it is made.The convict files and sends a parole plea to the jail superintendent, who forwards it to the divisional commissioner.The decision includes seeking a police report and communicating approval or rejection to the convict.

Delay in decision-making raises pertinent questions about whether prison authorities apply their mind, said a lawyer. Many lawyers say while the delay has come to light in Dutt's case, many applications remain pending for months, unnoticed and forgotten. “The rule book must be followed strictly as the high court has ruled in several cases,“ said advocate Farhana Shah, who has represented many convicts whose parole pleas were not decided for months. She said while Dutt's leave was “rightly granted“, though delayed, the “same consideration“ should be made for other inmates whose pleas are later rejected on the grounds that the reasons are no longer relevant. “If a parole plea is decided, for instance, after the marriage of the child of a convicted prisoner (for which leave was sought), it would defeat the very purpose,“ she said.

“If a plea is not decided in time, an extension plea would be rendered meaningless,“ said another lawyer, adding that even for furlough, the authorities are expected to verify the convict's conduct and record and only then grant leave.


Even convicts in jail for life can get furlough: SC

AmitAnand Choudhary, April 30, 2022: The Times of India


New Delhi: The Supreme Court ruled that furlough could not be denied to a convict who has been sentenced to remain in jail for his entire life without remission and such prisoners could not be deprived of their rights emanating from good jail conduct.

Furlough means release of aprisoner for a short period of time after a gap of certain qualified numbers of years of incarceration by way of motivation for maintaining good conduct and to remain disciplined in the prison. This is purely an incentive for good conduct in the prison. The period spent by the prisoner outside the prison on furlough shall be counted towards his sentence.

Setting aside the verdict of the Delhi HC which held that a prisoner condemned to live his entire life in jail was not entitled for furlough, a bench of Justices Dinesh Maheshwari and Aniruddha Bose said even if the person is otherwise not to get any remission and has to remain in prison for whole of the reminder of his natural life, that does not, as a corollary, means that his right to seek furlough is foreclosed. The court passed the plea of a convict seeking direction that his plea for furlough be considered.

SC: Double-murder convict not entitled to furlough extension

May 21, 2024: The Times of India


New Delhi : Supreme Court has set aside the relief granted to a double-murder convict who had concealed from the court that he was not entitled to be considered for remission before 30 years of rigorous imprisonment.


The bench of justices Abhay S Oka and Ujjay Bhuyan passed the order last week but made it available Monday. They said the earlier order in favour of convict Jitender will “no longer operate”.


The earlier order had exempted Jitender from surrendering despite the end of his furlough granted by jail authorities. Jitender had said that his plea for early release or remission had not been heard by Delhi’s sentence review board and hence, his furlough should be extended. He concealed from the court that he was ineligible for such relief as he had not completed 30 years of rigorous imprisonment.


The apex court, in the fresh order, issued a notice to Jitender to explain his conduct of hiding crucial facts from it and securing an order for which he was not eligible.


The court’s latest order makes the convict liable to be arrested immediately or he must surrender in Tihar. 
The court was hearing a plea for recall of its earlier order by the kin of a victim who pointed out that Jitender, who had once escaped from Tihar, stands sentenced to a life term with a 30-year cap on remission for committing two murders in a span of a few hours.


The plea pointed out that Jitender took undue advantage of a blanket court order granting relief to all those convicts out on furlough, who sought to be considered for early release by the sentence review board. 
The relative of one of the victims said the convict got relief “by fraud” and did not disclose that he was handed life imprisonment with the 30-year cap without remission by the apex court in 2018.


On March 10, 1999, Jitender stormed into a wedding reception in north Delhi and shot dead Anil Bhadana, the then president of Satyawati College Students’ Union, because Bhadana was about to depose against him in a criminal case. The same night, Jitender went to the house of Sumit Nayyar, an eyewitness who had informed police about Bhadana’s murder, and pumped three bullets into his father’s chest, killing him on the spot.

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