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Mumbai Central Jail: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 18°59′6.7″N 72°49′47.14″E / 18.985194°N 72.8297611°E / 18.985194; 72.8297611
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==Conditions==
==Conditions==
Space is at a premium inside. The jail was originally built to accommodate 800 prisoners but the average number of inmates is 10000+<ref name="dna"/>—far exceeding its capacity in terms of space, sanitation and other facilities.
Space is at a premium inside. The jail was originally built to accommodate 800 prisoners but the average number of inmates is 2000+<ref name="dna"/>—far exceeding its capacity in terms of space, sanitation and other facilities.


==Popular culture==
==Popular culture==

Revision as of 21:09, 1 February 2020

Mumbai Central Prison
Arthur Road Jail
Map
LocationMumbai, Maharashtra, India
Coordinates18°59′6.7″N 72°49′47.14″E / 18.985194°N 72.8297611°E / 18.985194; 72.8297611
StatusOpen
Security classMaximum
Capacity1074
Opened1926; 99 years ago (1926)

The Mumbai Central Prison, also referred to as Arthur Road Jail, was built in 1926,[1] and is Mumbai's largest and oldest prison. It houses most of the city's prisoners. It was upgraded in 1994 to become a Central Prison and given its current official name, but it is still popularly referred to as Arthur Road Jail. The jail occupies 2 acres (0.81 ha) of land.[1]

Location

The jail is located near Jacob Circle/Sat Rasta, between the Mahalaxmi and Chinchpokli railway stations and the Jacob Circle monorail station in the southern part of the city. It is now surrounded by residential property renting for Rs 12-25,000/sq foot, while commercial property is leased for Rs 30-60,000/sq foot.[1]

Conditions

Space is at a premium inside. The jail was originally built to accommodate 800 prisoners but the average number of inmates is 2000+[1]—far exceeding its capacity in terms of space, sanitation and other facilities.

The prison features in Gregory David Roberts' award-winning book Shantaram, which details his life on the run and his time spent in Mumbai, including a stint in Arthur Road. Several scenes in Katherine Boo's Behind the Beautiful Forevers take place in the facility.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Mustafa Plumber & Manish K Pathak (19 April 2011). "Time to free Mumbai of its overcrowded prison?". DNA India. Retrieved 25 November 2012.