Business Standard

Why arrested activists shouldn’t despair: 67% cases ended in acquittal or discharge

- CHAITANYA MALLAPUR & DEVYANI CHHETRI Mumbai, 8 September

Two-thirds of trials completed under a 51-year-old law used to arrest five human rights activists recently ended in acquittal or discharge in 2016, the latest year for which national crime data are available.

As many as 22 of 33 cases (67 per cent) under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act, 1967 (UAPA) ended in acquittal or discharge in 2016, compared to 18 per cent of cases that ended similarly under special and local laws (SLL), a category of laws applicable nationwide and which encompasse­s the UAPA, according to National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) data.

In 2015, 65 of 76 cases in which trials were completed under UAPA ended in acquittal or discharge. On average, 75 per cent cases have ended in acquittal/discharge over three years ending 2016, as per our analysis of NCRB data.

On August 28, 2018, five activists — Sudha Bhardwaj, Gaurav Navlakha, Varavara Rao, Arun Ferreira and Vernon Gonsalves — were arrested from different parts of the country for allegedly inciting violence in the Bhima-Koregaon riots in Pune.

On January 1, 2018, a large number of Dalits, gathered at Bhima Koregaon to mark a 200-year-old historical event, were attacked by local groups opposed to the celebratio­n. This led to widespread riots in the city and in other parts of Maharashtr­a.

On September 1, 2018, the Pune police sought more time to file chargeshee­ts against five accused–Sudhir Dhawale, Rona Wilson, Surendra Gadling, Shoma Sen and Mahesh Raut–arrested on June 6, 2018, under the UAPA, also over alleged Maoist links in connection with the Bhima-Koregaon violence, the Hindustan Times reported.

Their 90-day judicial custody, which was to end on September 3, 2018, can be extended up to 180 days under the UAPA, if the investigat­ion is not complete. In other cases, if the chargeshee­t is not filed within 90 days, bail can be granted to suspects.

Why critics call UAPA ‘draconian’ The UAPA has often been criticised for being oppressive. “The dangerous thing about UAPA is that both Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, or TADA, and POTA (Prevention of Terrorism Act) had a sunset clause which UAPA does not,” said Susan Abraham, advocate at the Bombay High Court and wife of Vernon Gonsalves, one of the accused in the Bhima Koregaon riots case.

Under a “sunset” provision, a law will cease to have effect after a fixed point of time. “The UAPA is a permanent statute. Both TADA and POTA, because of the sunset clause, had a time limit of two years after which they had to be sent to the Parliament for a new lease of life,” added Abraham.

The other issue is that the law does not have the provision for anticipato­ry bail. “Bail is difficult because you have to prove that prima facie there is no case,” Abraham said.

“The UAPA is not meant for convicting people, it is used to detain them,” alleged Mihir Desai, senior counsel at Bombay High Court. “Eventually, acquittals might happen but a considerab­le amount of time passes by and the person’s life is ruined. The burden of proof in usual matters falls on the police but under UAPA, the burden is now on the person accused to prove his innocence.” More than 2,700 cases registered over 3 years; 3,548 cases pending investigat­ion ending 2016

As many as 922 cases were reported under UAPA in 2016, down 5 per cent from 2014 (976) and up 3 per cent from 2015 (897), NCRB data show. Over 2,700 cases have been registered over three years ending 2016. Manipur reported the most–327, or 35 per cent of all UAPA cases–in 2016, nearly half the cases reported in 2014 (630). Assam came next (216), followed by Jammu and Kashmir (161) in 2016. All these are affected by insurgency/terrorism.

Of the 3,962 cases slated for investigat­ion in 2016, the police was burdened with a backlog of 76 per cent cases.

As many as 3,548 cases were pending investigat­ion at the end of 2016, with a pendency rate of 89.6 per cent. The pendency rate is estimated in terms of cases pending investigat­ion at the year- end per total cases for investigat­ion during the year.

In 2016, 1,488 cases were pending trial. Of these, 232 came in for trial that year, the remaining were held-over cases. Of these, trials were completed in 33 (22 acquitted/discharged and 11 convicted) cases. The conviction rate for cases under UAPA — cases convicted per cases in which trials were completed — in 2016 was 33 per cent, as against 82 per cent for all SLL cases, while the pendency percentage — cases pending trial per total cases for trial — stood at 97.8 per cent in 2016, as against 82 per cent for SLL cases.

What ‘unlawful activity’ means under UAPA

The Act accords absolute power to the Centre. Under subsection 1 of section 3, chapter 2, if the central government is of the opinion that an activity is unlawful then it may, by notificati­on in the Official Gazette, declare it so.

Unlawful activity is that which “questions, disrupts” or “intends to disrupt”, “the sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of India”, according to the Act. It objects to claims which may contribute to cession of any part of India or which may cause “disaffecti­on” against India. These definition­s also formed the foundation of two defunct terror laws: Terrorist and Disruptive Act, 1985 (TADA) and Prevention of Terrorism Act, 2002 (POTA). TADA was allowed to lapse in 1995 and POTA was repealed in 2004. “Both were repealed because of growing public opinion against their misuse, but nothing like that can be done about UAPA,” said Abraham.

The UAPA imported provisions from the discontinu­ed acts with amendments in 2004, 2008 and 2012. Till 2004, “unlawful” activities referred to actions related to secession and cession of territory. After the 2004 amendment, “terrorist act” was added to the list.

In 2012, UAPA was amended to further widen the definition of “terrorist act”. Now, threats to economic security — an umbrella term inclusive of food security, monetary and fiscal stability, etc; and actions like the counterfei­ting of currency, raising of funds or the intention to aid organisati­ons — were added to the original definition.

Clarificat­ions regarding “proceeds from terrorism” were also provided in an addendum. These included “properties” identified as being used in, intended to be used in or derived from acts of terrorism. They could also be identified as “instrument­s” in any form, monetary or otherwise.

In 2016, UAPA cases were categorise­d under “offences against the state” in addition to crimes recorded under the Indian Penal Code.

Printed with permission from Indiaspend.org, a data-driven not-for-profit organisati­on

 ?? Source: National Crime Records Bureau, 2014, 2015, 2016 ??
Source: National Crime Records Bureau, 2014, 2015, 2016

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