Though the Ministry of Home Affairs has said that Mumbai's Arthur Road jail is one of the best and safest in the country, the prison has been in news for its overcrowded barracks, unhealthy conditions and bloody fights. Here's a look at the British-era jail, which houses many high-profile convicts
The Mumbai Central Prison, also referred to as Arthur Road Jail, is the city's largest and oldest prison. It houses a majority of the city's prisoners. It was upgraded in 1994 to a Central Prison and was given its current official name.
Built in 1926, it was initially meant to be a transit prison, outside city limits. Over the years, the 2.83-acre prison compound is one of the most important landmarks of the city, and houses 2,680 inmates.
The Arthur Road jail is one of the most crowded prisons in India. The British-era jail was built to hold no more than 800 inmates.
As per accounts of former inmates, the cells, barely 3x7 ft., houses five people. There were only four bathrooms inside the barrack, and they are not reportedly cleaned for days.
Despite overcrowding and other issues, the prison has been an impenetrable fortress. No prisoner has ever been known to break out, and no outsider has ever been able to break in.
Though fugitive liquor baron Vijay Mallya has shown his reservations on being housed in the Arthur Road Jail, fugitive mafia don Dawood Ibrahim has reportedly said he was "keen to return to India" if only he was lodged in the jail, and nowhere else.