Context:
β’ The Supreme Court has reiterated the importance of speedy trials in cases under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA).
β’ The Court stressed that while Article 21 guarantees the right to life and personal liberty, national security and integrity of the nation remain overriding concerns in terrorism-related cases.
β’ The observations came during proceedings in the Jnaneshwari Express derailment case (2010), a major incident involving allegations of terror activity and mass casualties.
Key Highlights:
Supreme Court on Speedy Trials and National Security
β’ The SC emphasized that trials under UAPA must be conducted expeditiously.
β’ It recognized that UAPA cases involve:
β Presumption of guilt in certain circumstances
β Higher stakes linked to terrorism and national security
β’ The Court underlined that protecting the nationβs security is paramount, though constitutional safeguards must still apply.
Case Background: Jnaneshwari Express Derailment
β’ The case relates to the derailment of the Jnaneshwari Express on May 28, 2010.
β’ The incident resulted in:
β 148 deaths
β’ Six accused men were granted bail by the Calcutta High Court, leading to a CBI appeal before the Supreme Court.
CBI Appeal Against Bail Order
β’ The Supreme Court was hearing a CBI challenge to the High Courtβs bail order.
β’ The CBI argued that bail was wrongly granted by applying:
β Section 436-A CrPC
β’ Section 436-A allows bail to undertrials who have served half of the maximum possible sentence.
SC Ruling on Section 436-A CrPC
β’ The SC clarified that Section 436-A does not apply uniformly to:
β Heinous offences punishable with death
β’ The accused face serious charges under:
β Section 302 IPC (Murder)
β Section 16 UAPA (Terrorist Act)
β’ Since these offences carry the possibility of the death penalty, they fall outside the normal benefit of Section 436-A.
Bail Not Cancelled Despite Legal Error
β’ Although the Supreme Court set aside the High Courtβs reasoning regarding Section 436-A, it refused to cancel the bail already granted.
β’ The Court noted:
β No misuse of liberty by the accused
β No attempts to influence witnesses or derail the trial
β’ This reflects a balanced judicial approach between procedural correctness and practical fairness.
Concern Over Prolonged Trials
β’ The SC expressed concern that the trial has been delayed significantly.
β’ Despite earlier directions for speedy completion:
β Many witnesses remain unexamined
β’ The Court highlighted the Stateβs responsibility to ensure:
β Fair process
β Timely justice
β Opportunity for the accused to prove innocence
Relevant Prelims Points:
β’ UAPA (Unlawful Activities Prevention Act): Anti-terror law aimed at preventing unlawful activities and terrorism.
β’ Article 21: Fundamental Right guaranteeing life and personal liberty.
β’ Section 436-A CrPC:
β Provides bail eligibility for undertrials after serving half of maximum punishment.
β Not uniformly applicable to offences punishable with death.
β’ Key Legal Principle:
β Speedy trial is part of Article 21, but must be balanced with national security concerns.
Relevant Mains Points:
β’ Balancing Rights and Security:
β Article 21 safeguards cannot be the sole factor in terror-related offences
β National integrity and security are compelling state interests
β’ Challenges in UAPA Cases:
β Presumption of guilt provisions make bail harder
β Long trials risk violating personal liberty
β’ Judicial Approach:
β Courts must ensure fairness while preventing misuse of bail in terrorism cases
β’ Concerns:
β Prolonged incarceration without conviction
β Delayed witness examination undermines justice delivery
β’ Way Forward:
β Strengthen special courts and fast-track mechanisms for UAPA trials
β Ensure witness protection and timely prosecution
β Balance civil liberties with internal security imperatives
β Uphold due process to prevent misuse of anti-terror laws
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
β’ GS 2 (Polity & Social Justice): Article 21, speedy trial, bail jurisprudence
β’ GS 3 (Internal Security): UAPA framework, terrorism-related legal challenges
β’ Prelims: UAPA provisions, Section 436-A CrPC, constitutional safeguards
