This Article is From Dec 09, 2020

"Humanity Most Important": High Court On Jailed Activist Gautam Navlakha's "Stolen" Specs

A division bench of Justices SS Shinde and MS Karnik said it has learnt about how spectacles of Mr Navlakha were stolen inside jail and the prison authorities refused to accept the new spectacles sent by his family through courier.

'Humanity Most Important': High Court On Jailed Activist Gautam Navlakha's 'Stolen' Specs

Gautam Navlakha's family said the activist is "almost blind" without the spectacles. (File Photo)

Mumbai:

Observing that humanity is most important, the Bombay High Court on Tuesday referred to alleged theft of activist Gautam Navlakha's spectacles inside Taloja prison and called for the need to conduct a workshop for jail officials to sensitise them on the needs of prisoners.

Mr Navlakha is an accused in the Elgar Parishad-Maoist links case.

A division bench of Justices SS Shinde and MS Karnik said it has learnt about how spectacles of Mr Navlakha were stolen inside jail and the prison authorities refused to accept the new spectacles sent by his family through courier.

"Humanity is most important. Everything else will follow. Today, we learnt about Mr Navlakha's spectacles. This is the high time to conduct a workshop for even jail authorities," Justice Shinde said.

"Can all these small items be denied? These are all humane considerations," he added.

Mr Navlakha's family members on Monday claimed that his spectacles were stolen on November 27 inside the Taloja prison, where he is lodged.

They claimed that Navlakha is "almost blind" without the spectacles and yet, when they sent a pair of new spectacles to him by post earlier this month, the prison authorities refused to accept it and sent it back.

"Presently Gautam Navlakha is in acute distress, is unable to see things around him and consequently his blood pressure has shot up," read a statement circulated on Monday evening by Mr Navlakha's lawyers that was signed by the activist's wife Sahba Husain.

The high court was hearing two petitions filed by activists, Ramesh Gaichor and Sagar Gorkhe, challenging their arrest by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) in the Elgar Parishad-Maoist links case.

Senior counsel Mihir Desai, appearing for Mr Gaichor and Mr Gorkhe, told the High Court on Tuesday that the two were arrested by the NIA only because they refused to make statements before a magistrate against the other accused in the case.

The petitions also said the case should be held before the special NIA court in Pune, and not in Mumbai.

"The offence is alleged to have occurred in Pune. The case was initially held before a court in Pune. However, after the NIA took over the probe, it was transferred to the special NIA court in Mumbai even when there is a special NIA court in Pune," Mr Desai said.

NIA's advocate Sandesh Patil sought time, following which the High Court posted the matter for hearing on December 21.

Mr Navlakha had surrendered before the NIA, which is probing the nearly three-year-old case, on April 14, 2020.

Between August 29 and October 1, 2018, the activist had been kept under house arrest.

The case pertains to the Elgar Parishad conclave held in Maharashtra's Pune district on December 31, 2017, which, the police alleged, was funded by Maoists.

The speeches made by some activists at the conclave triggered violence near the Koregaon-Bhima war memorial on the outskirts of Pune city the next day, according to the police charge sheet.

The NIA later took over the case in which several activists and academicians have been named as accused.
 

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