Mumbai:Saying the fundamental right to protection of life and liberty guaranteed by Article 21 of the constitution applied to everyone, including prisoners, the Bombay High Court on Tuesday said it will consider alleged Maoist leader Nirmala Uppuganti's plea seeking transfer from prison to a hospice "from all angles" permissible under the law.
A bench of Justices SS Shinde and NJ Jamadar reserved its order on Uppuganti's plea seeking such transfer.
An accused in the 2019 Gadchiroli IED blast case, Uppuganti had filed a plea in the HC earlier this month seeking that she be shifted from the Byculla women's prison to a hospice as she is terminally ill with cancer.
At least 15 security personnel of the Gadchiroli Quick Response Team and one civilian were killed in an IED explosion triggered by Naxals in Maharashtra's Gadchiroli district on May 1, 2019.
In her plea filed through senior counsel Yug Chaudhry and advocate Payoshi Roy, Uppuganti asked to be shifted to a hospice for palliative care so that she will be "properly taken care of during her final days".
On Tuesday, Roy told the bench that Uppuganti's had metastatic cancer that had spread to her lungs and other organs. She said that Uppuganti, an undertrial, had reached stage four of cancer and deserved adequate medical care in her last days of life.
The state's counsel Sangeeta Shinde, however, opposed Uppuganti's plea.
Read: 15 commandos, driver killed as Naxals trigger IED blast in Maha