[This post was updated at 6PM on 19.05.2026 to add reference to this news article]
On 18.05.2026, a Division Bench of the Supreme Court handed down its verdict in Syed Iftikhar Andrabi [2026 INSC 503]. The bail application was allowed, which if we see the facts is not entirely surprising: the accused had been in jail for more than five years, there were many co-accused already on bail, some of them quite similarly placed, the incriminating material was largely confessional, and the trial was nowhere near completion.
It is not because of the factual analysis that the judgment runs into 102 pages, which is quite unusual for a bail petition. The length was necessitated as the Bench felt it had to clear the legal position on a key issue affecting bail adjudication in the UAPA context, and the broader context of special crimes more generally. This, of course, was the issue of what impact does lengthy undertrial incarceration have in bail petitions under the UAPA with its additional restrictions for grant of bail under Section 43-D.
According to the Bench, a position had been set out by the Bench of Three Justices in K.A. Najeeb [(2021) 3 SCC 713], holding that the rigours of merits-based statutory restrictions for granting bail would, in the case of grave delays, be trumped by the concerns for an accused's liberty. The value of liberty and to a speedy trial was seen as grounded in Article 21 of the Constitution; lengthy undertrial detention would, in case of grave delay, be seen as causing detention in a manner contrary to these fundamental rights.
This position seemed to have been doubted and departed from in two subsequent judgments delivered by Division Benches; the first was Gurwinder Singh [(2024) 5 SCC 403], and the second Gulfisha Fatima [2026 SCC OnLine SC 10] (both were opinions of the same author). These subsequent decisions had, seemingly, held that bail was not the rule in UAPA cases owing to the restriction placed by Section 43-D UAPA which evidenced a legislative preference for jail as the default, and no relaxation or mollification of this statutory restriction was caused by delays or by the lengthy undertrial detention of an accused.
The validity of this line of reasoning from both these opinions has been expressly doubted in Syed Iftikhar Andrabi [Paras 26 to 41]. The simplest line of critique is that the Division Benches could not have doubted or disagreed with the judgment of Three Justices in Najeeb. But the Court does not rest there, perhaps due to the manner in which both Gurwinder Singh and Gulfisha Fatima made departures. Neither said that the law laid down in Najeeb was bad; instead, the fight was about what law, if any, did Najeeb lay down in the first place.
Gurwinder Singh and Gulfisha Fatima departed from the opinion in Najeeb by reading the latter as tightly wound to its facts. In that case there was no prospect of speedy trial whereas in Gurwinder Singh notable progress had already been made, and in Gulfisha Fatima the delays were 'natural' owing to the complexity of the case. In other words, both opinions tried to denude the opinion in Najeeb of having laid down any law at all. Having done so, both opinions offered their reading of the law, which saw the statutory bar of Section 43-D UAPA remaining unaffected by any length of delay. Even if there was delay, the detention of an accused may yet be justified in the overall facts of a case.
Syed Iftikhar Andrabi has specifically disapproved of this interpretation of Najeeb, as well as the holding of both Gurwinder Singh and Gulfisha Fatima that the statutory bar is adamantine and remains unaffected by delays. It reminds us of the very clear observation in Najeeb, that in appropriate cases the statutory bar would 'melt' in the face of the pressure created by the prolonged and unconstitutional deprivation of an accused's liberty. The statutory bar is, and remains, subservient to constitutional interests.
The verdict is a helpful course correction by the Supreme Court in the domain of bail on grounds of delay which has seen a renaissance of sorts in the past five years across multiple statutory contexts containing a clause restricting grant of bail. Whether the course correction will hold or not is something to be seen. All it takes is another Bench of Three Justices to come and doubt Najeeb, after all. And it took only a day for the State to raise the possibility. Think about this for a moment. It is not a right to release on bail, but the mere possibility for considering bail pleas slightly more favourably for those who have spent inordinately long periods in custody pending trial, is what the fight is about. And even this possibility is precarious, dependent upon how some words in a statute are read. For now though, the possibility shines brighter than it did six months ago.
At the same time, let us not overstate the usefulness of this jurisprudence of apology created by our courts. Where, after depriving individuals of their liberty for years, at some unspecified point in the future their custodial detention mysteriously burnishes their claims to liberty with greater light. In fact, Syed Iftikhar Andrabi has ironically reinforced the sheer unfairness of it all quite drastically. At paragraph 42, the Court cites data suggesting extremely low conviction rates for UAPA crimes, and rhetorically asks how can the prolonged detention be justified merely because of serious allegations if there are such high possibilities of a future acquittal. If this reasoning is good for prolonged detention and delay on grounds of bail, it is also good for demanding greater accountability for deciding bail applications on merits and seriously assailing the constitutionality of the restrictive bail clauses under the UAPA and other laws.
The allegations against the accused were serious in Syed Iftikhar Andrabi, but they were based on hardly any credible material. So why did the courts below continue to shy away from granting bail on merits for the five years that it took for this judgment to pass? That, really, is the question which deserves a lot more scrutiny going forward in bail jurisprudence under the UAPA.
The vigour with which the Court has sought to resolve the creases within the legal fabric on delay-based bail for UAPA and other such crimes requires urgent reciprocation in the realm of merits-based bail. Only then will the proclamation of the Court in Syed Iftikhar Andrabi carry any real force: that bail remains the rule, and jail the exception, in all circumstances in our law.
[On reading of restrictive bail clauses, readers may find the six-part series 'Jail is Not the Rule' helpful]