"Dr Binayak Sen came out of prison with a new cause: to highlight the abysmal 
condition of prisons and the state of the prisoners languishing in jails"
 
FACE TO FACE 
‘Prison was a learning experience’ 

MEERA PRASAD 
http://www.thehindu.com/mag/2009/07/19/stories/2009071950030200.htm
 






Unjustly imprisoned by the Chattisgarh State and now out on bail, doctor and 
activist Dr. Binayak Sen talks of the horrors of prison and what lies ahead. 
Excerpts from a conversation... 




Photo: Arunangsu Roy Chowdhury 
 
Battling trauma: Dr. Binayak Sen soon after his release. 


Dr Binayak Sen came out of prison with a new cause: to highlight the abysmal 
condition of prisons and the state of the prisoners languishing in jails. He 
says, “It’s far worse in there than what people think. Prisons get little or no 
publ ic attention and the prisoners remain a forsaken lot.”
His health took a severe beating when he was in detention for two years. So he 
was at the Christian Medical College (CMC) hospital in Vellore recently for 
medical examination. When I met him in Vellore, he remembered his time in 
prison and spoke of the road ahead.
Dr. Sen is a renowned doctor and activist committed to community health and 
human rights. At the time of his arrest, he was the national vice-president of 
the People’s Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL) and the general secretary of the 
Chhattisgarh PUCL unit.
He sees his prison time as a “huge learning experience”. Thrown into a cell 
with those serving life sentences for murders and other heinous crimes, he 
learned first-hand about the deplorable conditions and the sub-human lives 
prisoners led.
Dr Sen was arrested and sent to the Raipur jail in May 2007 by the Chhattisgarh 
State on trumped up charges because he exposed government oppression of the 
tribals. He was labelled a “Maoist” by the state. The Supreme Court granted him 
bail on May 25 this year, and he was released from jail.
Nearly two months after his release, he is still battling the trauma of his 
jail term and gets very emotional when he remembers his prison mates with whom 
he developed “close friendships”. “The jail officials strip the prisoners of 
their dignity,” he says. “They are treated like cattle, identified only by the 
numbers allotted to them.
Dr. Sen is now enjoying quality time with his family — wife Ilina and daughters 
Pranhita and Aparajita. He is proud of his wife, a professor in women’s 
studies, who spearheaded the campaign for his release and turned the spotlight 
on his case, even as she ran the home and saw to their children’s needs.
Touched by the global outcry against his detention and the support that poured 
in, Dr. Sen says he is now experiencing the healing that only the warmth of 
loved ones can bring not just family, but also the hordes of friends and 
well-wishers. He is overwhelmed by the affection he has received from his alma 
mater, CMC-Vellore, during his ordeal and after. Excerpts from the 
conversation: 
Has the prison experience robbed you of your motivation to continue with the 
good work you started nearly two decades ago among poor tribals? 
The jail term was a dark phase. I had lost all hope of being released. My wife 
would ask me to remain optimistic during her weekly visits. She would brief me 
on the movement outside for my release. Her faith in a solution helped me hold 
on. I was also completely disappointed. This was the jail I walked in and out 
of as a doctor to treat the inmates, and there I was behind bars. I had never 
imagined that would happen. It was a setback but I will pick up the threads 
from where I left off and continue my work among the really poor people of the 
region. 
Were there uplifting moments in lockup? 
It has to be the love and concern of my prison mates. Their gentleness and 
sensitivity were amazing. They saw me as different from them and encouraged me 
as they watched the news clippings on TV and discussed aspects of my case. In 
my ward, which was barely a 10’x10’ space, there were 18 prisoners, all of them 
serving life-terms for murders and other serious crimes. Each had a concrete 
slab that was our bed and we were provided a blanket. Nothing else. My ward 
mates would give me their blankets to use as a mattress while they slept on the 
hard concrete without a cover.
We spent time talking and sharing. I also read a lot. We talked about ourselves 
but no one would delve into the other’s past. In our fellowship the past was 
never the focus. We accepted each other as we were.
I am convinced that many of those serving life sentences would not be rotting 
in jails if the laws were more sensitive and cases put on the fast track. Our 
judicial procedure is besieged with delays and lawyers are part of the problem. 
What gives you nightmares still? 
Many memories. After the wake-up call at 5.30 a.m. we were herded into a 
courtyard and counted like cattle to make sure none had escaped. There would be 
a recount every few hours. The prisoners were treated with contempt. I have 
seen fellow inmates flogged by the officials and the scale of the torture will 
always haunt me. Nobody dares to question the authorities and their actions are 
never given reasons. Nobody knew why I was sent into solitary confinement one 
day and brought back to the ward a month later. I was not given preferential 
treatment, but I was never beaten up or singled out for any form of 
ill-treatment. I remember one instance when I was sweeping the corridors, an 
official took the broom away from me saying that was not my job.
Again, suicides are a matter of grave concern and the suicide rate is quite 
unnerving in the jails. 
Your future plans? 
I am not yet free completely. However, I will go back to Rupantar, our NGO, and 
resume my weekly clinics in the tribal areas. My priorities will remain the 
rights of the poor and their quality of life. But first, I will lobby for 
prison reforms.




Meera Prasad is a freelancer based in Mumbai. 


With Regards 

Abi
 

"It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong."
- Voltaire" 


      
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"newsline" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/newsline?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to