Abdul Sattar vs Union Territory Of Jammu & Kashmir on 15 April, 2025

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Jammu & Kashmir High Court

Abdul Sattar vs Union Territory Of Jammu & Kashmir on 15 April, 2025

 HIGH COURT OF JAMMU & KASHMIR AND LADAKH
                 AT JAMMU

                                   Reserved on: 27.03.2025
                                   Pronounced on: 15.04.2025
HCP No. 159/2024
CM No. 7628/2024

Abdul Sattar, aged 52 years                            ...Petitioner(s)
S/O Late Sh. Jamal Din
R/O Village Ponara Soni
Tehsil Basantgarh District Udhampur
through his son Muneer Ahmed.


              Through: Mr. R.K.S Thakur, Advocate.

                         Vs

  1. Union Territory of Jammu & Kashmir
     through Commissioner/Secretary
     Department of Home
     Civil Secretariat, Jammu.
  2. District Magistrate, Udhampur
  3. Senior Superintendent of Police, Udhampur.
  4. Superintendent, Central Jail, Jammu.


                                                           Respondent(s)

              Through: Mr. Sumeet Bhatia, GA.



CORAM:   HON‟BLE MR. JUSTICE M A CHOWDHARY, JUDGE

                              JUDGMENT

01. Through the medium of this Habeas Corpus Petition, the

petitioner-Abdul Sattar (hereinafter called „detenue‟)

seeks quashment of Order No. 08-PSA of 2024 dated

23.11.2024 (hereinafter called „detention order‟) passed

by the respondent No. 2-District Magistrate, Udhampur
2 HCP No. 159/2024

(hereinafter called „detaining authority‟) whereby and

whereunder in terms of Section 8 of the Jammu and

Kashmir Public Safety Act (for short, PSA), he had been

ordered to be detained under preventive detention.

02. It has been pleaded that the respondent No. 3-Senior

Superintendent of Police, Udhampur in his dossier has

mentioned that FIR No. 09/2022 came to be registered

against the detenue under section 379 IPC, 26(e) (f) & (g)

Indian Forest Act and in the said FIR, the detenue has

already been enlarged on bail and trial in the said FIR is

pending; that the detenue was called in the Police

Station, Basantgarh on 26.11.2024 and he was arrested;

that thereafter the detenue was taken and lodged in

Central Jail, Jammu, where he was provided the letter

No. DMU/JC/1270 dated 23.11.2024, whereby he has

been informed that his detention has been ordered.

03. It has been further pleaded in the grounds of his petition

that the allegations leveled in the FIR No. 09/2002

registered under Section 379 IPC and Section 26 of the

Forest Act registered by Police Station, Basantgarh are

false and incorrect and in the said FIR, the detenue has

been enlarged on bail; that FIR No. 09/2022 was

registered on 26.02.2022 and the order of detention has

been made on 23.11.2024 i.e.,. after two years and 9
3 HCP No. 159/2024

months; that the respondents No. 2 and 3, in the

grounds of detention and dossier, have stated that in the

said FIR No. 09/2022, the challan has been presented

and the detenue has been granted bail in the said case,

as such, the said FIR cannot be made basis for the

purpose of passing the order of detention, more so the

copy of the said challan has not been provided to the

detenue nor the same has been made part of the record;

that preventive action under Section 126 of BNSS have

been claimed to have taken against the detenue, yet no

record pertaining to said action haa been provided to the

detenue, infringing the fundamental rights of the detenue

with regard to non-supply of record, therefore,

documents on the basis of which detention order was

passed have not been provided to the detenue, rendering

him unable to make effective representation; that the

detention order has not been explained to the detenue in

the language he understood; that the grounds of

detention are nothing but reproduction of allegations

made by respondent No. 3 in the dossier

04. Pursuant to notice, the respondents have not filed

counter affidavit, despite several opportunities.

05. Learned counsel for the detenue, reiterating the

submissions made in the petition, has argued that the
4 HCP No. 159/2024

detenue had been detained illegally by the detaining

authority without application of mind and based only on

the dossier prepared by the police; that the FIR No.

09/2022 was registered on 26.02.2022 and the order of

detention has been passed on 23.11.2024 i.e. after two

years and nine months, as such, the order of detention

cannot be based on stale FIR; that there is no fresh

incident mentioned in the dossier; that in the dossier,

there is a mention of preventive action under section 126

BNSS but the said Section is attracted only when an

Executive Magistrate receives information that any

person was likely to commit breach of peace or disturb

the public tranquility etc and he was of the opinion that

there was sufficient ground for proceeding, he might

require such person to show cause why he should not be

ordered to execute a bond or bail bond for keeping peace

or such period, not exceeding one year as he thinks fit

but in the instant case, no such procedure has been

adhered to, under Section 126 of BNSS, rendering the

detention order bad; that in the grounds of detention, it

is stated that the detenue has remained involved in

harbouring and providing logistic support to the

terrorists and is also OGW in the record of Police Station,

Basantgarh but no record, whatsoever, has been provided

to the learned Executive Magistrate showing that the
5 HCP No. 159/2024

detenue has remained involved in harbouring and

providing logistic support to the terrorists and is also

OGW in the record of Police Station; that although

preventive action under section 126 of BNSS have been

taken against the detenue yet no record pertaining to

said action has been provided to the detenue rendering

him unable to file effective representation; that there is

no mention of fresh incident in the grounds of detention;

that the detention order has not been explained to the

detenue in the language he understood; that the grounds

of detention are nothing but reproduction of allegations

made by respondent No. 3 in the dossier. Lastly, he has

argued that the detention order be quashed.

06. Learned counsel for the respondents, ex adverso, argued

that the detaining authority, after carefully examining the

dossier and the relevant records attached with it, found

imperative to detain the detenue under the Public Safety

Act; that on the basis of intelligence inputs, the detaining

authority deemed it appropriate to detain the detenue

under the Public Safety Act; that all the relevant material

has been supplied to the detenue. Lastly he has argued

that the impugned detention order be upheld and the

petition filed by the detenue, being devoid of any merit

and substance, be rejected.

6 HCP No. 159/2024

07. Heard learned counsel for the parties, perused the

detention record and considered.

08. The impugned detention order has been challenged

mainly on the grounds, firstly that that the detention

order in question was based on stale reference of FIR of

the year 2022, secondly that no action has been taken

under section 126 of BNSS by the Executive Magistrate;

thirdly material with regard to proceedings under Section

126 BNSS with regard to the involvement of the detenue

in harbouring and providing logistic support to the

terrorists has not been provided to the detenue for

making an effective representation.

09. So far as the first ground of challenge that the detention

order in question was based on stale reference of FIR of

2022 is concerned, the detaining authority ought to have

considered this aspect of the matter while passing the

impugned detention order inasmuch as the detenue’s

involvement has been shown in the said FIR, which ex

facie shows that this FIR, by all stretch of reference, is

too remote to be a live link to consider a case of

preventive detention of a person and is stale reference to

have any nexus with the grounds of detention forming

basis for subjecting the detenue to preventive detention

custody.

7 HCP No. 159/2024

10. In the case of “Sama Aruna Vs State of Telangana

and others,” reported in (2018)12 SCC 150 against a

detention order dated 23.11.2016 passed by the

Commissioner of Police Rachakonda Commissionerate,

Rangareddy District, Telangana, the detenue, through his

wife, had preferred a writ petition challenging preventive

detention which came to be dismissed and the matter

reached before the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India in an

appeal. The order of preventive detention was based upon

the grounds of detention which came to be referred to six

criminal cases against the detenue, four of which of the

year 2007, one of 2013 and other of 2014. The detention

came to be questioned on the grounds of detention being

stale. The Hon’ble Supreme Court of India came to

consider the relevance of 9 to 14 years’ old incidents

resulting in FIRs through a grossly belated order of

detention. In paras 16 & 17, the Hon’ble Supreme Court

of India came up with the following reference:-

“16. Obviously, therefore, the power to detain, under
the Act of 1986, can be exercised only for preventing a
person from engaging in, or pursuing or taking some
action which adversely affects or is likely to affect
adversely the maintenance of public order; or for
preventing him from making preparations for engaging in
such activities. There is little doubt that the conduct or
activities of the detenu in the past must be taken into
account for coming to the conclusion that he is going to
engage in or make preparations for engaging in such
activities, for many such persons follow a pattern of
criminal activities. But the question is how far back?
There is no doubt that only activities so far back can be
8 HCP No. 159/2024

considered as furnish a cause for preventive detention in
the present. That is, only those activities so far back in
the past which lead to the conclusion that he is likely to
engage in or prepare to engage in such activities in the
immediate future can be taken into account. In Golam
Hussain alias Gama v. Commissioner of Police, Calcutta
and Ors.
(1974)4 SCC 530, this Court observed as follows:

“5. No authority, acting rationally, can be satisfied,
subjectively or otherwise, of future mischief merely
because long ago the detenu had done something evil To
Rule otherwise is to sanction a simulacrum of a
statutory requirement. But no mechanical test by
counting the months of the interval is sound. It all
depends on the nature of the acts relied on, grave and
determined or less serious and corrigible, on the length
of the gap, short or long, on the reason for the delay in
taking preventive action, like information of
participation being available only in the course of an
investigation. We have to investigate whether the causal
connection has been broken in the circumstances of
each case.

Suffice it to say that in any case, incidents which are
said to have taken place nine to fourteen years earlier,
cannot form the basis for being satisfied in the present
that the detenu is going to engage in, or make
preparation for engaging in such activities.

17. We are, therefore, satisfied that the aforesaid
detention order was passed on grounds which are stale and
which could not have been considered as relevant for arriving
at the subjective satisfaction that the detenu must be
detained. The detention order must be based on a reasonable
prognosis of the future behavior of a person based on his
past conduct in light of the surrounding circumstances. The
live and proximate link that must exist between the past
conduct of a person and the imperative need to detain him
must be taken to have been snapped in this case. A
detention order which is founded on stale incidents,
must be regarded as an order of punishment for a crime,
passed without a trial, though purporting to be an order
of preventive detention. The essential concept of
preventive detention is that the detention of a person is
not to punish him for something he has done but to
prevent him from doing it. See G. Reddeiah v.
Government of Andhra Pradesh and Anr.
(2012) 2 SCC
389, and P.U. Iqbal v. Union of India and Ors.
(1992) 1
SCC 434.”

11. In the case of “Khaja Bilal Ahmed Vs State of Telangana

and others,” (2020) 13 SCC 632 the Hon’ble Supreme

Court of India again came up dealing with the case of
9 HCP No. 159/2024

preventive detention based upon stale grounds. In this case,

the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India makes reference to its

judgment in the case of Sama Aruna Vs State of

Telangana and others (supra). In para 23, the Hon’ble

Supreme Court of India has stated its position as under:-

“………………….The satisfaction to be arrived at by the
detaining authority must not be based on irrelevant or
invalid grounds. It must be arrived at on the basis of
relevant material; material which is not stale and has a
live link with the satisfaction of the detaining authority.
The order of detention may refer to the previous criminal
antecedents only if they have a direct nexus or link with
the immediate need to detain an individual. If the
previous criminal activities of the appellant could
indicate his tendency or inclination to act in a manner
prejudicial to the maintenance of public order, then it
may have a bearing on the subjective satisfaction of the
detaining authority. However, in the absence of a clear
indication of a causal connection, a mere reference to the
pending criminal cases cannot account for the
requirements of Section 3. It is not open to the detaining
authority to simply refer to stale incidents and hold
them as the basis of an order of detention. Such stale
material will have no bearing on the probability of the
detenu engaging in prejudicial activities in the future.”

12. So far as second ground of challenge that no action has

been taken under Section 126 of BNSS is concerned, it

transpires that in the grounds of detention, it is stated

that the detenue has remained involved in harbouring

and providing logistic support to the terrorists and is also
10 HCP No. 159/2024

OGW in the record of Police Station, Basantgarh, as such

the detenue was proceeded against under Section 126

BNSS by the Executive Magistrate but said Section has

not been complied with in totality as the Executive

Magistrate has not issued any show cause notice to the

detenue as to why he should not be ordered to execute a

bond or bail bond for keeping the peace for such period,

not exceeding one year.

13. The detaining authority seems to have wavered in its

satisfaction based on different grounds to pass the

impugned detention order against the detenue indicating

that the detenue was a known criminal whose activities

had instilled fear among the peaceful residents of the

area and also these activities pose a significant threat to

national security, however, without making mention of

any incident related to such activity except some vague

accusations that he had been provided logistic support as

an Over Ground Worker, the mere indication in the

grounds that the detenue was resident of the local area

where a CRPF Inspector had tragically lost his life makes

no sense as without any specific allegation against the

detenue, the detaining authority has made a mention of

an FIR registered way back in the year 2022 on

11.02.2022 wherein the detenue along with one Showkat
11 HCP No. 159/2024

Ali were found to have committed damage to the felled

dry trees and as such, both of them were booked under

the Indian Forest Act, 1927 and a chargesheet was laid in

the court. The detenue as an accused, however, was

admitted to bail. Besides the aforesaid FIR, a mention

has been made to some preventive action taken against

the detenue at the instance of Police Station, Basantgarh,

however, no record in that behalf was either served upon

the detenue or produced for the perusal of this court. In

view of the case having been registered under Indian

Forest Act, 1927 against the detenue and his no

involvement in any other case of national security or

public order being there, it appears that the detaining

authority had acted upon the dossier prepared by the

police only. Therefore, it shows that the detaining

authority has not drawn any subjective satisfaction while

passing the detention order.

14. So far as third ground of challenge that relevant material

has not been provided to the detenue is concerned, it is

established from the perusal of the execution report that

the detenue was provided thirty leaves including

detention order, corrigendum thereto, notice of detention,

grounds of detention, dossier of detention, copies of FIR,

statements of witnesses and other related documents
12 HCP No. 159/2024

which had been acknowledged by the detenue to the

Executing Officer Inspector Jonesh Kumar. The

respondents have, however, failed to substantiate with

regard to the detailed documentation made available to

the detenue so as to enable him to file a meaningful and

effective representation to the detaining authority or the

Government of Jammu and Kashmir, so much so that no

record pertaining to preventive action under section 126

BNSS has been provided to the detenue,

in the absence whereof, it could never be expected of the

detenue to make an effective representation against the

order of detention either to the Govt. or to the detaining

authority itself.

15. In Thahira Haris v. Government of Karnataka & Ors,

AIR 2009 SC 2184, the Apex Court after noticing various

judgments on similar issue held that it was imperative for

a valid continuance of detention that the detenue be

supplied all documents, statements and other materials

relied upon in the grounds of detention, failing which the

right of the detenue of making an effective representation

as enshrined under Article 22(5) of the Constitution,

would be violated.

16. As a sequel to the aforementioned discussion and

observations made hereinabove, the present petition is
13 HCP No. 159/2024

allowed. Consequently, impugned detention order is

quashed. The detenue is directed to be released forthwith

if not required in any other case. The detention record be

returned to the learned counsel for the respondents.

17. Disposed of accordingly.

(M A CHOWDHARY)
JUDGE
JAMMU
15.04.2025
Naresh/Secy

Whether order is speaking: Yes
Whether order is reportable: Yes

Naresh Kumar
2025.04.15 16:38
I attest to the accuracy and
integrity of this document

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