Danish Farooq Bhat vs Union Territory Of J&K Through on 29 April, 2026

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    Jammu & Kashmir High Court – Srinagar Bench

    Danish Farooq Bhat vs Union Territory Of J&K Through on 29 April, 2026

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           HIGH COURT OF JAMMU & KASHMIR AND LADAKH
                          AT SRINAGAR
    
    HCP No.237/2025
    CM 4151/2025
    CM 7578/2025
                                               Reserved on: 21.04.2026
                                               Pronounced on: 29.04.2026
                                               Uploaded on: 30.04.2026
    
                                               Whether the operative part or full
                                               judgment is pronounced- Full
    
    Danish Farooq Bhat,
    S/O Farooq Ahmad Bhat,
    (Through his father)
    R/O Kulangam, Kupwara.
    
                                                       ...Petitioner(s)
    
                Through: Adv. Arafat Rashid.
    
                                     Vs.
    1. Union Territory of J&K through
      Commissioner/Secretary to Govt.,
      Home Department,
      Civil Sectt. Srinagar.
    
    2. Director General of Police,
      J&K, Srinagar.
    
    3. District Magistrate,
       Kupwara.
    
    3. Sr. Superintendent of Police,
      P.D Handwara.
    
    4. Superintendent District Jail,
      Jammu.
    
                                                  ...Respondent(s)
    
                Through: GA Faheem Nisar Shah.
    CORAM:HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE M. A.CHOWDHARY, JUDGE
                                       JUDGMENT
    

    1. The petitioner herein -Danish Farooq Bhat (‘detenue’ for short) is

    aggrieved of the order passed by the respondent No.3-District

    SPONSORED

    Magistrate, Kupwara (‘DM’ for short), who, in exercise of powers
    Page |2

    conferred on him under Section 8(1)(a)(i) of the J&K Public

    Safety Act, 1978, as detaining authority has detained the petitioner

    in order to prevent him from the activities detrimental to the security

    of the UT of J&K in terms of detention Order No. 06-DMK/PSA of

    2025 dated 29.04.2025 ( ‘impugned order’ for short).

    1. The impugned order of detention is challenged, inter alia, on the

    grounds that the respondents have not followed due procedure of law

    while detaining the detenue under the preventive law which renders

    his detention illegal; that the illegal activities attributed to the

    detenue are all imaginary, false, baseless, concocted and based on

    surmises; that the detenue was illegally implicated in case FIR No.

    133/2017 under Section 7/25 Arms Act, registered at Police Station,

    Handwara; that the investigation in the said FIR culminated in filing

    of a charge-sheet, presented before the court of competent

    jurisdiction and the same is pending trial; that after registration of

    FIR No. 133/2017 there are no fresh allegations leveled against the

    detenue; that the detaining authority has not applied its mind while

    preparing the grounds of detention and has acted upon the

    recommendations of the Police agencies and has framed the grounds

    of detention at their behest; that there is no cogent material to detain

    the detenue under the preventive law; that the satisfaction is illusory

    and not valid one; that the detention of the detenue is patently illegal

    and against the law and deserves to be quashed.

    2. Respondents, pursuant to notice after admission of the petition to

    hearing, filed their counter affidavit, wherein it is stated that the

    order of detention is based on a reasonable prediction of future
    Page |3

    behavior of the detenue; that the detenue’s anti-national and illegal

    activities have posed a serious threat to the public safety and security

    of UT of J&K; that the preventive detention is devised to afford

    protection to the Society and the object is not to punish a man for

    having done something but to intercept him before he does it and to

    prevent him from doing; and that any preventive measures, even if

    they involve some restraint or hardship upon individuals, do not

    contribute in any way to the nature of punishment.

    3. Learned counsel for the petitioner has raised the plea of vagueness in

    the grounds of detention. It is being argued that the allegations

    leveled in the grounds of detention relate to the year 2017 and those

    activities have no proximity with the period when the impugned

    order was passed for the purpose of preventive detention unless any

    fresh activity is not attributed to the petitioner. It is also contended

    by the learned counsel for the petitioner that it is not mentioned in

    the impugned detention order that normal law was ever invoked

    before taking recourse to preventive detention law and that too was

    applied merely on the basis of surmises and conjectures. It was

    prayed to upset the impugned order being unsustainable for the

    aforestated grounds.

    4. Learned counsel for the respondents, ex adverso, supporting the

    detention order, contended that the detenue’s continuous anti-

    national and illegal activities, made it imperative to detain the

    detenue under the provisions of Public Safety Act and there were

    sufficient grounds available for such detention. It is further

    contended that the live link is still sustaining, as the detenue is still

    involved in the anti-national activities and the adverse reports
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    projected by the sponsoring agency to recommend the detenue for

    preventive detention under the provisions of the Public Safety Act.

    5. Heard, perused the detention record as has been made available by

    learned counsel for the respondents and considered the same.

    6. The detaining authority-DM has based the detention order on the

    grounds that the detenue was supporter of banned organization of

    ‘Lashker-e-Toiba’, indulged in subversive activities; that he was

    involved in a case registered at Police Station, Handwara in the year

    2017 vide FIR No.133/2017 under section 7/25 IA Act, in which

    charge-sheet was laid before the competent court of law and the

    petitioner was enlarged on bail in the said case; that the detenue was

    influenced by the radical ideology and was indulged in subversive

    activities; and that in view of terrorist attack in Baisaran Valley of

    Pahalgam and to curb his activities, it was imperative to detain the

    detenue to provide peaceful environment in the region.

    7. The allegations leveled against the detenue that besides being

    involved in an old case of the year 2017, he is still inclined towards

    anti-national activities particularly in view of recent terrorist attack

    in Baisaran Valley of Pahalgam and is influenced by radical

    ideology, is all vague as no reference has been made to any specific

    activity. In such a situation the detenue would not be in a position to

    submit an effective and a meaningful representation before DM or

    the competent authority in the Government, to have a fresh look into

    the matter.

    8. The Supreme Court of India and also the various High Courts

    including this Court, consistently hold that preventive detention on

    vague, irrelevant or ambiguous grounds is illegal and violates Article
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    22(5) of the Constitution. The detaining authority must provide

    specific details to allow the detenue to make an effective and

    meaningful representation. Failure to furnish the aforesaid details

    such as dates, time and locations of alleged activities renders the

    detention a ‘mechanical’ exercise of power, a serious invasion of

    personal liberty as provided under Article 21 of the Constitution.

    Therefore, non-existent, irrelevant or vague grounds that cannot be

    understood, the detention cannot be justified. Reference can be made

    to the judgments of the Apex Court in the cases reported in (i)

    (2023) 9 SCC 587 titled ‘Ameena Begum Vs. State of Telangana &

    Ors.‘; and (ii) ‘Chaju Ram Vs. State of J&K’ reported as AIR 1971

    SC 263.

    9. In Ameena Begum‘s case (supra), the Hon’ble Apex Court has

    observed in para-49 that:-

    “49.The other aspect requiring some guidance for
    detaining authorities and on which we wish to
    comment is that there is no requirement in law of
    orders of detention being expressed in language
    that would normally be considered elegant or
    artistic. An order of detention, which is capable of
    comprehension, has to precisely set forth the
    grounds of detention without any vagueness. The
    substance of the order and how it is 36
    understood by the detenu determines its nature.
    An order in plain and simple language providing
    clarity of how the subjective satisfaction was
    formed is what a detenu would look for, since the
    detenu has a right to represent against the order
    of detention and claim that such order should not
    have been made at all. If the detenu fails to
    comprehend the grounds of detention, the very
    purpose of affording him the opportunity to make
    a representation could be defeated. At the same
    time, the detaining authority ought to ensure that
    the order does not manifest consideration of
    extraneous factors. The detaining authority must
    be cautious and circumspect that no extra or
    additional word or sentence finds place in the
    order of detention, which evinces the human
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    factor – his mindset of either acting with personal
    predilection by invoking the stringent preventive
    detention laws to avoid or oust judicial scrutiny,
    given the restrictions of judicial review in such
    cases, or as an authority charged with the notion
    of overreaching the courts, chagrined and
    frustrated by orders granting bail to the detenu
    despite stiff opposition raised by the State and
    thereby failing in the attempt to keep the detenu
    behind bars”.

    10. Again the Hon’ble Apex Court in Chaju Ram’s case (supra) has

    observed and enunciated that:-

    “Even as to the grounds, we have something to
    say. The grounds charge him with having
    conspired with some leaders of Democratic
    Conference and having incited landless people of
    R.S.Pura Tehsil to forcibly occupy the land
    comprised in Nandpur Mechanised Farm and to
    have persuaded them to resist violently any
    attempt to evict them. No details of the leaders of
    the Conference or of the persons incited or the
    dates on which he conspired or incited the
    squatters or the time when such conference took
    place, are mentioned. It would be impossible for
    anybody to make a representation against such
    grounds. These grounds, on the authorities of this
    Court, too numerous to be cited here, must be
    held to be vague. Therefore on both the twin
    grounds, namely, that he was deprived of his right
    to make a representation and also because the
    grounds in themselves were very vague, we must
    hold that there was no compliance with the law as
    laid down in the Jammu and Kashmir
    Preventive Detention Act
    . The result, therefore,
    is that the detention must be declared to be
    unlawful and Chaju must be declared to be
    entitled to his liberty. He is ordered to be released.
    The detenu was questioned by us and he
    expressed a desire that he may not be released in
    Delhi, because he has no means of going back.
    He asked to be released in Jammu. We direct
    therefore that he shall be taken back to the place
    where he was in detention in Jammu and released
    within the shortest possible time.”

    11. It is the further argument of learned counsel for the petitioner that

    the grounds of impugned detention order is a verbatim copy of the

    dossier and no other material has been considered by the detaining
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    authority which speaks volumes about the non-application of mind

    on the part of the detaining authority which does not justify the

    preventive detention and the detention order requires quashment.

    12. In a case titled ‘Jai Singh & Ors. v. State of Jammu &

    Kashmir‘ reported as AIR 1985 SC 764, it has been observed that if

    the detention order is verbatim copy of the dossier, it would amount

    to non-application of mind by the detaining authority. Para-13 of the

    judgment being relevant is reproduced as under:-

    “13. Applying the settled legal position to the
    facts of the present case, I find that the order
    impugned cannot stand as it is based on grounds
    of detention, which is only verbatim copy of
    police dossier. The order of detention, for the
    reasons, exhibit total non- application of mind on
    the part of detaining authority and therefore, the
    petition is allowed and the detention order No.
    PSA/104 dated 16.10.2020 passed by the District
    Magistrate, Kathua-respondent No. 2 directing
    the detention of Balbir Chand S/O Rana R/O
    Chack Drab Khan, Tehsil and District Kathua is
    quashed. Respondents are directed to release the
    detenue forthwith, provided he is not required in
    connection with any other case”.

    13. On perusal of dossier prepared and submitted by the police to the

    detaining authority and the impugned order passed by him, based

    thereon, it is found that the impugned order, particularly the grounds

    therefor, and the grounds mentioned in the dossier by the police are

    almost verbatim, except for some cosmetic changes. The impugned

    order is, thus, not sustainable on this account alone.

    14. Except the case FIR registered in the year 2017, wherein detenue

    was alleged to have attended the funeral prayer of Lashker-e-Toiba

    killed terrorist namely Sabzar on 06.06.2017 along with a pistol and
    Page |8

    later surrendered before Security Forces at Kulangam, there is no

    specific allegation against the detenue as to how and in what manner

    his participation in the funeral prayer can be a threat to the security

    of UT of J&K.

    15. The vague grounds cannot be based to deprive a citizen of his

    cherished fundamental right of liberty so as to detain him. Mere

    apprehension that he was involved in some criminal activities in the

    year 2017, with no fresh, proximate activities, there is no

    justification for preventive detention of the detenue in the year 2025

    there being no live link and stale grounds.

    16. 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 are of 2007, one of 2013 and one of 2014. The detention came

    to be questioned on the plea of grounds 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 paragraphs 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,
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    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
    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.

    P a g e | 10

    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…”

    17. For what has been held by the Apex Court in the afore-quoted case

    laws and having regard to what has been observed hereinabove, the

    impugned detention order does not sustain in the eyes of law. The

    impugned detention order passed on vague grounds, verbatim copy

    of police dossier and stale grounds with no live link between the

    alleged activities in the year 2017 and the detention order passed in

    the year 2025, is found liable to be quashed on these counts.

    18. Viewed thus, the present petition is allowed and the impugned

    detention order No. 06-DMK/PSA of 2025 dated 29.04.2025, is,

    hereby quashed. As a result, the detenue namely Danish Farooq Bhat

    S/O Farooq Ahmad Bhat R/O Kulangam, Kupwara, is directed to be

    released from the custody forthwith, if not required in any other

    case(s).

    19. HCP No. 237/2025 is, thus, disposed of as allowed along-with

    connected application(s).

    P a g e | 11

    20. Detention record is directed to be returned back to the learned

    counsel for the respondents.

    ( M. A. CHOWDHARY )
    JUDGE
    Srinagar
    29.04.2026
    Muzammil. Q

    Whether the order is reportable: Yes / No



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