Preventive Not Punitive: J&K High Court Backs PSA Detention to Thwart Terror Links
In a firm endorsement of preventive detention powers, the dismissed a challenging an order under the . Single Judge bench of Hon’ble Mr. Justice M. A. Chowdhary upheld the detention of Mohammad Ashraf Sheikh, accused of links to the proscribed , ruling that such measures aim to intercept threats before they materialize, not to punish past acts.
From Arms Seizure to Modesty Outrage: A Trail of Suspected Subversion
Mohammad Ashraf Sheikh, from Kawoosa Khalisa in Budgam, faced detention on , by District Magistrate Budgam under to prevent acts prejudicial to state security. His record included a 2022 arrest by and Army personnel, where police recovered a Chinese pistol, ammunition, magazines, and LeT posters from him and an associate during a search in Rathsun Beerwah—linked to FIR No. 35/2022 under the and .
Released on bail in , Sheikh was later implicated in FIR No. 55/2024 for criminal trespass, hurt, and outraging modesty after allegedly attacking a woman in her home in . Multiple preventive arrests under followed in 2023-2024 for anti-national involvement. Reports painted him as an LeT overground worker (OGW) instigating youth, prompting the PSA order.
Petitioner's Cry: Vague Claims, Stale Intel, and Rights Trampled
Sheikh's counsel argued the detention rested on "false and flimsy grounds"—vague assertions without justification, barring effective representation. Key gripes: no supplied documents or FIR copies, no info on representation rights to the District Magistrate, and reliance on "stale" pre-2024 incidents. They claimed this violated constitutional safeguards under , defeating his liberty.
Respondents countered with a robust dossier: PSA detentions are inherently preventive, targeting those normal laws can't rein in. Sheikh's pattern—from terror hardware to violent crimes—showed a "criminal mindset" threatening public safety. Beat officer reports flagged his ongoing instigation potential. Execution reports confirmed he received detention grounds, warrant, and FIRs in Urdu/Kashmiri, with representation options clearly conveyed.
Decoding Liberty vs. Security: Precedents Seal the Deal
Justice Chowdhary invoked Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978) for fair procedures guarding , yet carved space for 's preventive framework to shield society from imminent harm. Drawing from the Constitution Bench in State of Bombay v. Atma Ram Shridhar Vaidya (1951), the court stressed courts can't second-guess the detaining authority's if grounded rationally—materials need not meet evidentiary standards, just indicate "strong probability" of prejudicial acts.
Echoing
Ashok Kumar v. Delhi Administration
(1982) and
Naresh Kumar Goyal v. Union of India
(2005), later reaffirmed in
Union of India v. Dimple Happy Dhakad
(2019), the judgment clarified:
"Preventive detention is devised to afford protection to society. The object is not to punish a man for having done something but to intercept before he does it and to prevent him from doing so."
As media reports on the ruling noted, even restraints involving hardship
"do not partake of the nature of punishment"
—a bulwark for national security custodians.
The court rejected vagueness claims, finding grounds "definite and unambiguous," and confirmed procedural compliance, including language-accessible service of documents.
Key Observations
"Right ofis a most precious right guaranteed under the Constitution of India. A person is not to be deprived of his, except in accordance with procedures established under law..."
"The satisfaction of the Government however must be based on some grounds... If... the grounds... are such as a rational human being can consider connected... the question of satisfaction... cannot be challenged in a court."
"Preventive detention is devised to afford protection to society. The object is not to punish a man for having done something but to intercept before he does it and to prevent him from doing so."
"Those who are responsible for national security... must be the sole judges of what... requires."
Petition Dismissed: Detention Stands, Precedent Reinforced
The court dismissed HCP No. 8/2025 on , upholding the PSA order. No illegality found; Sheikh remains in Bhaderwah District Jail. This ruling reinforces PSA's role in J&K's volatile context, limiting judicial interference to procedural lapses while prioritizing security. Future cases may cite it to affirm authorities' latitude against suspected OGWs, balancing liberty with societal protection amid ongoing threats.