Thwaha Fasal (left) and Allan Shuaib. Photos: Twitter
New Delhi: The Supreme Court on October 28 upheld
the bail of two Kerala students who had been charged under the Unlawful
Activities Prevention Act by the NIA, which had claimed that they had
links with Maoists.
Thwaha Fasal and Allan Shuaib had been charged under the UAPA
after both police and the NIA said that they were affiliated to the
banned Communist Party of India (Maoist). At the time of their arrests,
in November 2019, Shuaib and Fasal were 19 and 23 years old
respectively.
The top court had reserved judgment on September 23. On that day, the apex court had asked NIA
if recovery of literature from a person, membership of a banned
organisation and shouting of slogans alone can attract charges under the
UAPA.
“These are boys in their early 20s, they have some material in their
possession. Can they be incarcerated only because of some kind of
inference you draw…According to you, if any incriminating material was
seized from these persons or their houses, you can infer that they are
actively participating in these terrorist organisations?,” the Supreme
Court had asked.
Thwaha Fasal
A bench comprising Justices Ajay Rastogi and A.S. Oka set aside the
Kerala high court order which had cancelled Fasal’s bail. The court had
held that the materials seized from him were serious and proved his
culpability. It also sought to highlight that Fasal had reportedly
raised Maoist slogans, which were “blameworthy.”
LiveLaw has reported
that the court directed that Fasal be produced before the NIA trial
court to complete the bail formalities and that the conditions of the
bail order passed by the special NIA court in Kochi in September 2020
will be followed.
Senior advocate Jayant Muth Raj, who appeared for Fasal, had held
that the NIA charge sheet did not establish that Fasal had, in any way,
attempted to further the activities of any Maoist group, so as to
attract Sections 38 and 39 of the UAPA.
Raj also highlighted that NIA has dropped Section 20 of the UAPA,
which is the offence relating to membership of banned terror group, from
the charge sheet.
Allan Shuaib
The apex court also dismissed the appeal filed by the NIA challenging
the same Kerala high court judgment affirming the trial court’s order
granting bail to law student Allan Shuaib in a UAPA case registered over
alleged Maoist links, claimed by the NIA.
The division bench of the high court had refused to cancel Shuaib’s bail, considering his young age and health.
Senior advocate R. Basant, who appeared for Shuhaib said that the
‘intention’ for offence under sections 38 and 39 cannot be gathered from
mere books or pamphlets.
Additional
Solicitor General S.V. Raju, who appeared for the NIA, said the
materials themselves were incriminating and established closed links
with “Maoists’ terror activities”. ASG Raju, however, agreed that the
dropping of section 20 of the UAPA was a “lacunae” but expressed the
wish to add it later by getting the needed sanction.
As
The Wire had
reported earlier, some of the documents the NIA had produced as evidence were notices to demand implementation of the Madhav Gadgil Committee report to protect
ecology in Western Ghats and safeguard Adivasi interests, a book
called
Great Russian Revolution, portraits of communist leaders Mao Tse Tung and Che Guevera and of Kashmir’s separatist leader
S.A.S. Geelani and books that propagated “Marxist ideologies” and “Islam ideology”.
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