It will facilitate state overreach and criminalize dissent. The Fadnavis government must withdraw
Synopsis: The recent introduction of the Maharashtra Special Public Security Bill, 2025, has ignited a fierce debate, with critics, including a prominent editorial in the Indian Express, calling for its immediate withdrawal. The controversy centres on the fundamental tension between the state’s duty to ensure national security and its constitutional obligation to protect citizens’ fundamental rights. While the government posits the bill as a necessary tool to combat modern security threats, its provisions are being widely condemned as draconian, unconstitutional, and a direct assault on the democratic ethos of India.

- Vague and Overbroad Definitions: The Bill uses ambiguous terms like “threat to public security,” “subversive activities,” and “anti-national elements.” Such vague definitions are susceptible to misuse, allowing the state to arbitrarily target activists, journalists, and political opponents who are critical of the government.
- Excessive Executive Powers: It empowers designated police officers to declare an area as a “special security zone,” granting them authority to restrict movement, assembly, and communication. This bypasses the need for judicial oversight, vesting judicial functions in the executive, which violates the principle of separation of powers.
- Erosion of Procedural Safeguards: The proposed law allegedly weakens standard criminal procedures. It may include provisions for extended police custody, stringent bail conditions that place the onus on the accused to prove their innocence, and admissibility of confessions made to police officers—provisions reminiscent of repealed draconian laws like TADA and POTA.
- Chilling Effect on Freedom of Speech and Expression: By criminalizing the dissemination of information deemed a “threat to security,” the Bill poses a grave danger to freedom of the press and individual expression, guaranteed under Article 19(1) (a) of the Constitution. It risks creating a “chilling effect,” where citizens and the media resort to self-censorship for fear of persecution.
- The state government justifies the Bill as a necessary response to emerging internal security challenges, including organized crime, urban extremism, and cyber-terrorism, which it argues the existing Indian Penal Code (IPC) and CrPC are inadequate to address.
- However, from a constitutional perspective, the Bill appears to fail the test of “reasonable restrictions” under Article 19(2). The Supreme Court, in cases like K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India, has established the principle of proportionality, which mandates that any restriction on fundamental rights must be necessary, legitimate, and the least intrusive measure possible. The Maharashtra Bill, with its sweeping powers and lack of safeguards, seems disproportionate to its stated objectives.
- Furthermore, its provisions challenge the sanctity of Article 21 (Right to Life and Personal Liberty), which ensures that no person shall be deprived of their life or personal liberty except according to a “procedure established by law.” The Supreme Court has interpreted this to mean the procedure must be fair, just, and reasonable, a standard this Bill seems to violate.
- Shrinking Space for Dissent: In a vibrant democracy, dissent is a safety valve. Laws that criminalize peaceful opposition and criticism hollow out democratic accountability.
- Weaponisation of Law: The Bill could become a tool for the ruling dispensation to suppress political adversaries and silence critical voices, undermining the fabric of a multi-party democracy.
- Federal Concerns: While ‘Public Order’ and ‘Police’ are State List subjects, laws impinging on fundamental rights and national security have national implications, potentially leading to a patchwork of varied security laws across states that could undermine a unified legal framework.
- Immediate Withdrawal and Public Consultation: The government should withdraw the Bill and initiate a comprehensive consultation process involving legal experts, human rights organizations, civil society, and opposition parties.
- Strengthening Existing Laws: Instead of enacting new draconian laws, the focus should be on strengthening the existing criminal justice system through police reforms, better intelligence gathering, and ensuring speedy trials.
- Legislative and Judicial Review: Any proposed legislation must be meticulously scrutinized by a legislative select committee and must be designed to withstand judicial review based on the touchstone of fundamental rights.
