Tihar Prisons
Prison centre in Delhi, India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tihar Prisons, popularly known as Tihar Jail, are a prison complex in India and are one of the largest complexes of prisons in India. There are 9 functional prisons spread over more than 400 acres.[2][3] Run by Department of Delhi Prisons, the prison contains nine central prisons, and is one of the three prison complexes in Delhi. The other two prison complexes are at Rohini and Mandoli with one and six central prisons respectively.[4] Tihar prison complex is located in Janakpuri, approximately 3 km from Tihar village in West Delhi.
Location | Tihar Village, New Delhi, India |
---|---|
Coordinates | 28°37′03″N 77°06′02″E |
Status | Operating |
Security class | Maximum |
Capacity | 5,200(out of total 10,026 of other two jail) |
Population | 14,059(out of total 20,458 of other two jail)[1] (as of 31 December 2023) |
Opened | 1957 |
Managed by | Department of Delhi Prisons |
Website | tiharprisons |
The prison is styled as a correctional institution. Its main objective is to convert its inmates into ordinary members of society by providing them with useful skills, education, and respect for the law. It aims to improve the inmates' self-esteem and strengthen their desire to improve. To engage, rehabilitate, and reform its inmates, Tihar uses music therapy, which involves music training sessions and concerts.[5] The prison has its own radio station, run by inmates.[6] There is also a prison industry within the walls, manned wholly by inmates, which bears the brand Tihar.[7] As of December 2023[update], Tihar jail has 14,059 inmates against the sanctioned capacity of 5,200. The prison population as of 31 December 2023 has increased by double in comparison to the population as of 31 December 2018.[1][8]
History
Originally, Tihar was a maximum-security prison run by the State of Punjab. In 1966 control was transferred to the National Capital Territory of Delhi. Beginning in 1984, additional facilities were constructed, and the complex became Tihar Prison, also the largest jail in India.
Under the charge of IPS officer Kiran Bedi, when she was Inspector General of Prisons, she instituted a number of prison reforms at Tihar, including changing its name to Tihar Ashram. She also instituted a Vipassana meditation program for both staff and inmates; initial classes were taught by S. N. Goenka. The Prison has also produced an inmate who has passed the UPSC civil service examinations.[9]
Many of the inmates continue their higher education through distance education. The campus placement program was launched in 2011 for the rehabilitation of inmates about to complete their sentences. In 2014, a recruitment drive led to 66 inmates selected on the basis of their good conduct, received job offers with salaries up to ₹35,000 (US$410) per month, from as many as 31 recruiters, which included educational institutions, NGOs and private companies.[10][11]
Jail factory
In 1961, the Jail Factory was established in Central Jail No.2, at Tihar. Over the years, its activities have expanded to include Carpentry, Weaving (Handloom & Powerloom), Tailoring, chemicals, Handmade paper, Commercial art, and baking. Later in 2009, a shoe manufacturing unit was established using the Public-Private Partnership model, and thus the brand TJ's was launched. As of May 2014, 700 inmates work in these units, and 25% of their earnings are deposited in the Victim Welfare Fund, which provides compensation to the victims and their families.[12] A CSR initiative has been launched to provide a Level 4 training program comprising 340 hours of coursework to 1,200 inmates from the National Council for Vocational Training (NCVT) to empower inmates for a productive post-release life, as a step toward the rehabilitation of undertrials incarcerated for minor offences.[13]

Prisoners
- Abhijit Banerjee — Indian born American Nobel laureate. While studying in JNU, he was arrested and imprisoned in Tihar Jail during a protest after students surrounded the then Vice-Chancellor, PN Srivastava, of the university
- Anubrata Mondal — Indian politician accused of cow smuggling
- Sanjay Gandhi — former Member of Parliament and husband of Menaka Gandhi, son of Indira Gandhi
- Lalu Prasad Yadav — former Union Minister of Railways, former Chief Minister of Bihar, incarcerated for Fodder scam
- Subrata Roy — founder of Sahara India Pariwar[14]
- Chhota Rajan — Mumbai-based gangster
- Sushil Kumar — Indian Wrestler, arrested in connection with the murder of a 23-year-old wrestler at Chhatrasal Stadium
- Satwant Singh and Kehar Singh — security guards, hanged for the assassination of Indira Gandhi
- Charles Sobhraj — an international serial killer, secretly escaped from Tihar on 16 March 1986, but was recaptured shortly thereafter, returned to the prison and sentenced to an additional ten years for the escape. He was released and deported upon the completion of his term on 17 February 1997.
- Ripun Bora — education minister of Assam's Tarun Gogoi-led Congressional government, the main suspect in the Daniel Topno murder case, was arrested by CBI officials on 3 June 2008 and sent to Tihar on 7 June 2008[citation needed]
- Suresh Kalmadi — former president of the Indian Olympic Association, who was arrested for alleged corruption regarding the 2010 Commonwealth Games[15]
- Amar Singh — former member of the Samajwadi Party, arrested in a cash-for-votes scandal[16]
- Anna Hazare and Arvind Kejriwal — Indian social activists fighting against corruption, were imprisoned in Tihar for protesting conflicts between differing Civil Society and UPA Government anti-corruption bills, known as the Jan Lokpal Bill and the Lokpal Bill, respectively
- Jagtar Singh Hawara and Paramjit Singh Bheora, Khalistani militants, main accused in the assassination of Punjab Chief minister Beant Singh[17]
- Jagtar Singh Johal — accused in 2016–17 targeted killings in Punjab, India[18]
- Abhishek Verma — accused in Navy War Room Leak case & Scorpene Submarines deal.
- Anca Neacșu Verma — wife of Abhishek Verma, co-accused in all his corruption cases[19][20][21]
- Afzal Guru — Kashmiri separatist and Jaish-e-Mohammed terrorist involved in the 2001 Indian Parliament attack, who was executed on 9 February 2013
- Maqbool Bhat — Kashmiri separatist who waged war for secession of Kashmir as a separate state from India and Pakistan
- Milkha Singh — former Indian sprinter, for travelling in a train without ticket.[22]
- P. Chidambaram — former Union Minister of Finance, Judicial custody in relation to the INX media Corruption case.[23]
- D. K. Shivakumar — former Minister in Karnataka Govt., sent to prison in money laundering case.[24]
- Sudhir Chaudhary — Indian journalist sent to 14-day judicial custody but was later released on bail in extortion case[25]
- Kuljeet Singh and Jasbir Singh — executed in 1982 for the Geeta and Sanjay Chopra kidnapping case
- The accused in the 2G spectrum case, including A. Raja, M. K. Kanimozhi, Vinod Goenka, Shahid Balwa, and Sanjay Chandra[15]
- 5 of the accused in the 2012 Delhi gang rape; Ram Singh (committed suicide in March 2013), Mukesh Singh, Akshay Thakur, Pawan Gupta & Vinay Sharma; they were hanged on 20 March 2020
- Sanjay Dutt, Indian actor and businessman
- Chandrashekhar Azad Ravan, an Indian politician
- Kanhaiya Kumar, Indian politician and activist
- Umar Khalid, Indian Activist
- E Abubacker, anti-national activities done under banned PFI organization.
- Asif Iqbal Tanha, Indian student activist
- Sonu Punjaban, Indian sex trafficker
- Lawrence Bishnoi, Indian gangster
- The accused in the Delhi liquor scam, including K. Kavitha, Manish Sisodia, Satyendra Kumar Jain, and Sanjay Singh
Escapes
Sher Singh Rana, who had been arrested for the murder of Phoolan Devi in 2001, escaped from Tihar jail in February 2004. He was arrested again in 2006, in Kolkata.[26]
In June 2015, two prisoners who were waiting for their trial in Tihar jail escaped through a tunnel.[27]
Health concerns
The prison complex has no facilities for keeping paraplegic pre-trial inmates or convicts.[28]
The Integrated Counseling and Testing Centre reports that around 6% to 8% of the 11,800 Tihar inmates are HIV-positive, which is considerably higher than the HIV rate among the general population in India.[29]
In popular culture
- Doing Time, Doing Vipassana is a 1997 documentary about the introduction of S. N. Goenka's 10-day Vipassana classes at Tihar Jail in 1993 by then Inspector General of Prisons in New Delhi, Kiran Bedi. Bedi had her guards trained in Vipassana first, and then she had Goenka give his initial class to 1,000 prisoners.[30]
- In the film Jailer (2023), Rajinikanth is shown as Tihar Jailer "Tiger" Muthuvel "Muthu" Pandian.
- The 2025 Black Warrant Netflix Series is based on the story Sunil Gupta, a Tihar jailer, and included notable events such as the execution of Ranga Billa and Maqbool Bhat.
See also
- Black Warrant, non-fiction book about prisoners in the jail
References
External links
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