Attorney General K K Venugopal, appearing for the Centre, told a bench of Justices Madan B Lokur and Deepak Gupta that if specific directions were passed, the states would have to comply with it, otherwise they would be guilty of not adhering to the apex court's order.
He argued that the apex court could take up the prison reforms issue in six or seven states at a time and pass specific directions to them after hearing the matter.
However, the bench said, "there would be some problem in this. If we will take matters of three-four states at a time, it will take time."
"That would not be possible. There are a number of cases here. If we are going to take 3-4 states at a go, it will take time," the bench said, after which Venugopal said the court could take up the matters of seven states at a time.
"There are laws made by Parliment which have been discussed and debated. They have passed the law. These have to be implemented," the bench said.
The court said it was dealing with the issue of prison reforms which have four aspects -- overcrowding in jails, unnatural deaths in prisons, training of staffs employed there and filling up of vacancies.
It said it has already passed general directions so far as the aspect of overcrowding in prisons was concerned and it would decide on the remaining three issues.
The top court had earlier asked the Centre and all states to implement its directions on prison reforms.
Earlier, the court had pointed to the "huge discrepancy" in expenses incurred on jail inmates by various states and had asked the Ministry of Home Affairs to come out with a scheme to audit the accounts of jails across the country with the assistance of the Comptroller and Auditor General.
As per the data, the expense per inmate in jails in Bihar was Rs 83,691 per annum, while that in Rajasthan was only about Rs 3,000 per annum. Similarly, in Nagaland, it stood at about Rs 65,468 per annum, while in Punjab, it was around Rs 16,669, it had noted.
The bench is hearing a 2013 PIL on the inhuman conditions prevailing in 1,382 prisons across the country.
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