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Delhi High Court denies bail to Tasleem Ahmed in 2020 Delhi Riots conspiracy case

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The Delhi High Court’s refusal to grant bail to Tasleem Ahmed must be understood against the backdrop of the extraordinary legal architecture of the UAPA, a statute designed to deal with offences that are perceived as striking at the heart of national security and public order. Unlike ordinary criminal law, the UAPA introduces an almost presumptive bar on bail, tilting the scales heavily in favour of the State.

Justice Subramonium Prasad, while acknowledging the “agonising reality” of prolonged incarceration without conclusion of trial, nonetheless underscored that liberty cannot be viewed in isolation from the gravity of the allegations. With over three hundred witnesses yet to testify, the court appeared wary of extending relief which might, in its assessment, undermine the integrity of the ongoing prosecution.

The defence stressed that Ahmed had spent more than five years in custody without being found guilty, a circumstance which in other contexts might strongly favour bail. However, the prosecution countered that delay alone cannot dilute the rigor of Section 43D(5) of the UAPA, which prohibits bail if the court believes the accusations to be prima facie true. Thus, the High Court was faced with a jurisprudential dilemma: whether the constitutional promise of personal liberty can be curtailed indefinitely in the name of public safety, and if so, to what extent.

By declining bail, the court reaffirmed the position that the right to liberty must sometimes yield to the imperatives of national security and communal harmony when weighed against allegations of conspiracies to incite large-scale violence. Yet, its observations on delay betray a deep unease with the protracted nature of UAPA trials, hinting at the judiciary’s awareness that justice deferred may in practice become justice denied.

The verdict thus reflects not only the unyielding letter of the UAPA, but also the judiciary’s continuing struggle to reconcile statutory restrictions with the constitutional ethos of fairness and due process.

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