Sanjay Dutt's application rejected; asked to surrender

Sanjay Dutt, who went to Yerawada jail in Pune on the end of his 14-day furlough but did not surrender and returned home on January 9, will have to surrender, since his application seeking extension of furlough leave has been rejected.

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Sanjay Dutt's application rejected; asked to surrender

Sanjay Dutt, who went to Yerawada jail in Pune on the end of his 14-day furlough but did not surrender and returned home on January 9, will have to surrender, since his application seeking extension of furlough leave has been rejected. Lawyer, Rizwan Merchant spoke to PTI regarding the same.

Dutt, 55, who flew to Pune yesterday and went up to Yerawada Central Jail, spent a few hours in the vicinity of the prison and later went away without surrendering, though his 14-day furlough had ended. The ostensible reason was that a government official had said that it was not necessary for him to go back to jail till a decision was taken on his Dec 27 application for extension of his furlough. He had been granted a 14-day furlough to go home Dec 24.

Sanjay Dutt
Sanjay Dutt

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After a controversy erupted on social media regarding Dutt's repeated paroles and furlough, the chief miniter of Maharashtra, Devendra Fadnavis had tweeted that his government would strictly adhere to rules, as far as Dutt's case was concerned. "Government will strictly adhere to rules while deciding furlough to Sanjay Dutt. Our Government doesn't believe in discriminating or victimising anybody. Law treats all equal," the minister's tweet read.

Earlier, the actor had been released on furlough in October 2013 for two weeks, due to health reasons, followed by a similar leave in December 2013 to tend to his ailing wife, Maanyata, attracting charges of favouritism. Dutt's latest furlough saw him attending a special show of PK, and celeb parties, while exhibiting his new set of eight abs built up in prison.

In February last year, the Bombay High Court had commented on the diligence in granting the actor's requests for furlough which was not visible in case of other convicts who applied for leave.

Dutt was convicted in 2007 for illegal possession of an AK-56 assault rifle during the 1992-1993 Mumbai communal conflagration before the March 12, 1993 serial bomb blasts in the city and sentenced to six years jail. The Supreme Court had upheld the conviction in 2013 but reduced the sentence to five years, less time already served.

Dutt surrendered on May 16, 2013, and was moved to the high-security jail in Pune to serve the remainder of his 42-month sentence.

(With agency inputs)