Courts Our Last Hope’: Mehbooba Mufti Urges Judiciary to Ensure Return of J&K Prisoners


Jammu, Nov 3, KNT: People’s Democratic Party (PDP) President and former Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti on Monday made a heartfelt appeal outside the Jammu and Kashmir High Court, seeking the return of prisoners from the Union Territory who are lodged in jails across India.
Addressing the media after attending the hearing of her Public Interest Litigation before the Chief Justice, Mehbooba described the courts as the last hope for those families who have been separated from their loved ones for years. “Courts are our last hope,” she said, her voice filled with emotion. “Behind every number and every case, there is a story, a mother waiting for her son, a father growing old in silence, a child sleeping each night without knowing when their parent will return.”
She said the issue of detainees was not political but deeply humanitarian, arguing that the young men imprisoned outside Jammu and Kashmir were not statistics but sons of the soil who deserve dignity, justice, and a chance to rebuild their lives.
“For years, hundreds of our youth have been lodged in prisons far from their homes, in Agra, Bareilly, Haryana and other states. Their families neither have the means nor the strength to travel such long distances. Trials are delayed, hearings are held in their absence, and justice remains out of reach. This is not the idea of India that our Constitution envisions,” she said.
Mehbooba Mufti urged the Chief Justice to initiate comprehensive reforms in the criminal justice system of Jammu and Kashmir, saying that prisoners should be lodged within their home region so that their families can visit them and they can face a fair trial. She said that delayed trials amounted to denial of justice and called for transparency and presence of the accused at every hearing.
Reiterating her faith in the judiciary, she said, “Detention should be the exception, not the rule. Bail is a right, not a favour. Parole, remission and furlough are legal safeguards, not political concessions. Prisons should reform lives, not destroy them.”
The PDP President also emphasised that medical bail must be treated as a constitutional and humanitarian safeguard. “I have faith in our judiciary and hope in our courts,” she added. “I believe the day is not far when justice will prevail, and our courts will ensure the ‘Ghar Wapsi’, the return of all J&K prisoners to their homeland.”
Her statement comes amid growing concern over the plight of Kashmiri detainees held in various prisons outside the Union Territory. Families have repeatedly complained of poor access to their kin and prolonged delays in court proceedings.
The High Court, led by the Chief Justice, took up the matter earlier in the day, and the government is expected to submit its detailed response on the next date of hearing. [KNT]




