Haseena @ Lado vs State Nct Of Delhi And Anr on 29 April, 2026

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    Delhi High Court – Orders

    Haseena @ Lado vs State Nct Of Delhi And Anr on 29 April, 2026

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                           *         IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
                           +         BAIL APPLN. 88/2026
                                     HASEENA @ LADO                                                                  .....Applicant
                                                                   Through:            Mr. Amjad Khan, Mr. Mohd.
                                                                                       Azhruddin and Mr. Amit Khowal,
                                                                                       Advocates
    
                                                                   versus
    
                                     STATE NCT OF DELHI AND ANR              .....Respondents
                                                   Through: Mr. Raghuinder Verma, APP for
                                                            the State with Ms. Upasna Bakshi
                                                            and Mr. Aditya Vikram Singh,
                                                            Advocates with SI Pavan Kr, PS:
                                                            Sunlight Colony
                                     CORAM:
                                     HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SAURABH BANERJEE
                                                                   ORDER
    

    % 29.04.2026

    1. By virtue of the present application under Section 483 of the
    Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 read with Section 439 of the
    Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (CrPC), the applicant seeks grant of
    regular bail in proceedings arising out of FIR No.34/2017 dated
    02.02.2017 registered at PS.: Sun Light Colony, Delhi under Sections
    363
    /376D/370/342/506 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 and Sections 4/6 of
    the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012 (POCSO Act).

    SPONSORED

    2. Briefly put, as per prosecution, on 02.02.2017 the prosecutrix was
    produced at PS Sunlight Colony, Delhi by the staff of PS Hazarat
    Nizamuddin along with an activist from Delhi Commission for Women.

    This is a digitally signed order.

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    Therefter, her statement under Section 161 CrPC was recorded, wherein
    she stated that in October 2016 she ran away from her house in
    Chhattisgarh and reached New Delhi railway station. There, she was lured
    by the co-accused Arman, who took her to a room in Sarai Kale Khan,
    Delhi where she met his wife, the present applicant. The accused Arman
    sexually assaulted her in the presence of the applicant and after two days,
    sold her to co-accused Pappu Yadav, who forcibly married her in a temple
    and thereafter repeatedly subjected her to physical and sexual abuse.
    Subsequently, on 28.01.2017 the prosecutrix escaped from the clutches of
    the Pappu Yadav and returned to Hazarat Nizamuddin Railway Station,
    where she was intercepted by the present applicant, who forcibly
    intoxicated the prosecutrix and thereafter facilitated the gang rape by other
    co-accused persons. Based on the aforesaid statement, the present FIR
    came to be registered.

    3. Eventually, the present applicant was arrested on 11.04.2017.

    4. In these facts, of the many grounds raised in the present application,
    learned counsel for the applicant praying for release of applicant on bail
    primarily submits that [i] the applicant is a young woman with no criminal
    antecedent and has been falsely implicated in the present case; [ii] the
    applicant is in continuous judicial custody for an inordinately long period
    of about nine years; [iii] though Section 35(b) of the POCSO Act provides
    that the trial be completed within a period of one year from the date of
    taking cognizance, the present trial has remained pending for several years
    which amounts to violation of applicant’s fundamental right to speedy trial
    as enshrined under Article 21 of the Constitution of India; [iv] around 12
    witnesses out of total 33 witnesses still remained to be examined; [v]co-

    This is a digitally signed order.

    The authenticity of the order can be re-verified from Delhi High Court Order Portal by scanning the QR code shown above.
    The Order is downloaded from the DHC Server on 30/04/2026 at 21:54:54
    accused Pappu Yadav and Mohd. Afroz have already been granted bail
    and, therefore, the applicant is entitled to the benefit of parity; [vi] the case
    of the prosecution suffers from material inconsistencies inasmuch as
    several public witnesses have turned hostile and not supported the
    prosecution case as also that there exist material contradictions in the
    evidence of the prosecutrix; and lastly [vii] as per bone ossification of the
    victim the higher side of the age of the victim is 18 years.

    5. Per contra, learned APP for State has handed over the status report,
    which is taken on record. Relying thereon and opposing the grant of bail
    to the applicant, he submits that [i] the allegations against the applicant are
    serious in nature; [ii] applicant was an active participant in the
    commission of the alleged offences inasmuch as she had facilitated the
    acts attributed to the co-accused persons; [iii] trial is at the fag-end, with
    all material witnesses having already been examined and only formal
    witnesses remaining; [iv] the applicant stands on a different footing from
    that of the co-accused who have been granted bail and, as such, cannot
    claim parity.

    6. Heard learned counsel for the parties as also perused the records.

    7. No doubt, the facts and circumstances herein are grave and serious
    invoking Sections 363/376D/370/342/506 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860
    and Sections 4/6 of the POCSO Act, however, it is an undeniable fact that
    the applicant is a woman with clean antecedents and more than anything
    else, she has been facing incarceration for almost nine years, and that she
    has not been able to get a speedy trial. Today, the trial is at the stage of
    prosecution evidence, when as many as 12 out of 33 witnesses are still left

    This is a digitally signed order.

    The authenticity of the order can be re-verified from Delhi High Court Order Portal by scanning the QR code shown above.
    The Order is downloaded from the DHC Server on 30/04/2026 at 21:54:54
    to be examined, which will seemingly take time. Resultantly, the end is
    not near.

    8. Records reveal and there is/ are no allegations and/ or untoward
    pointing towards the applicant which reflect that she has tried to influence
    the witnesses and/ or tamper with the evidence and/ or hamper the trial at
    any stage during the past nine years.

    9. Moreover, as per the Nominal Roll received, her conduct has been
    ‘Satisfactory’.

    10. Be that as it may, there may be other various aggravating factors
    which may form the basis of denying bail to the applicant, however, this
    Court while dealing with the present bail application cannot lose sight of
    the cumulative effect of the factors such as long incarceration of the
    applicant, denial of speedy trial to her, her behaviour inside jail while
    facing incarceration. All the aforesaid factors gain much significance, and
    when coupled with the factum that the applicant is, as on date, only an
    accused, and is yet to be pronounced guilty, assume significance and have
    to be given due weightage and are thus also essential elements for
    consideration. All accused like the applicant are to be accorded benefit of
    Article 21 of the Constitution of India which includes the right to a speedy
    trial, which the applicant has not been able to get, and the right to liberty,
    though not of the same magnitude as an ordinary citizen.

    11. The Hon’ble Supreme Court has consistently held that prolonged
    incarceration without any likelihood of conclusion of trial in near future
    amounts to a violation of the fundamental right to speedy trial guaranteed
    under Article 21 thereof. In Union of India v. K.A. Najeeb: (2021) 3 SCC
    713 the Hon’ble Supreme Court has held that once it is obvious that a

    This is a digitally signed order.

    The authenticity of the order can be re-verified from Delhi High Court Order Portal by scanning the QR code shown above.
    The Order is downloaded from the DHC Server on 30/04/2026 at 21:54:54
    timely trial would not be possible, and the accused has suffered
    incarceration for a significant period of time, the courts would ordinarily
    be obligated to enlarge him/her on bail.

    12. Similarly, in the case of Javed Gulam Nabi Shaikh v. State of
    Maharashtra
    : Crl.A.2787/2024, the Supreme Court has also observed as
    under:-

    “19. If the State or any prosecuting agency including the
    court concerned has no wherewithal to provide or protect
    the fundamental right of an accused to have a speedy trial as
    enshrined under Article 21 of the Constitution then the State
    or any other prosecuting agency should not oppose the plea
    for bail on the ground that the crime committed is serious.
    Article 21 of the Constitution applies irrespective of the
    nature of the crime.”

    13. Lastly, it has also been brought to the notice of this Court that the
    other co-accused persons namely Pappu Yadav and Mohd. Afroz have
    already been granted bail. Though the role attributed to them is different
    from that attributed to the applicant herein and the same, in itself, is not a
    determinative consideration for enlarging the applicant on bail, however, it
    lends some support to the cause of the applicant.

    14. Accordingly, keeping in mind all the above cumulative factors in
    the considered opinion of this Court, the applicant is entitled to grant of a
    regular bail. As such, the present application is allowed. The applicant be
    thus released on regular bail in proceedings arising out of FIR No.34/2017
    dated 02.02.2017 registered at PS.: Sun Light Colony, Delhi under
    Sections 363/376D/370/342/506 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 and
    Sections 4/6 of the POCSO Act, upon her furnishing a personal bond in
    the sum of Rs.50,000/- [Rupees Fifty Thousand Only] along with one

    This is a digitally signed order.

    The authenticity of the order can be re-verified from Delhi High Court Order Portal by scanning the QR code shown above.
    The Order is downloaded from the DHC Server on 30/04/2026 at 21:54:54
    surety of the like amount by a family member/ friend having no criminal
    case pending against him/ her and subject to the satisfaction of the Jail
    Superintendent, and further subject to the following conditions:

    i. Applicant shall not leave NCT of Delhi without prior
    permission of this Court and shall ordinarily reside at the address as
    per prison records. If she wishes to change his residential address,
    she shall immediately intimate about the same to the IO by way of
    an affidavit.

    ii. Applicant shall surrender her passport, if any, to the IO,
    within a period of three days.

    iii. Applicant shall appear before the Court as and when the
    matter is taken up for hearing.

    iv. Applicant shall provide all her mobile numbers to the IO
    concerned which shall be kept in working condition at all times and
    shall not be switch off or change the mobile number without prior
    intimation to the IO concerned. Mobile location be kept on at all
    times.

    v. Applicant shall report to the IO at PS: Sun Light Colony once
    every month in the first week of the month unless leave of every
    such absence is obtained from the learned Trial Court.
    vi. Applicant shall not indulge in any criminal activity and shall
    not communicate with or come in contact with any of the
    prosecution witnesses, or tamper with the evidence of the case.

    15. The present bail application, along with pending applications, if
    any, is disposed of.

    This is a digitally signed order.

    The authenticity of the order can be re-verified from Delhi High Court Order Portal by scanning the QR code shown above.
    The Order is downloaded from the DHC Server on 30/04/2026 at 21:54:54

    16. Copy of this order be sent to the concerned Jail Superintendent for
    information and compliance.

    17. Needless to say, expression of view(s) on the merits involved, if
    any, are solely for the purposes of adjudication of the present bail
    application and shall have no bearing on the overall case/ trial involved.

    SAURABH BANERJEE, J
    APRIL 29, 2026/So

    This is a digitally signed order.

    The authenticity of the order can be re-verified from Delhi High Court Order Portal by scanning the QR code shown above.
    The Order is downloaded from the DHC Server on 30/04/2026 at 21:54:54



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