A ‘terrorist act’ is not just finale, but culmination of conspiratorial activities: SC


UPSC Study Note: 'Terrorist Act' under UAPA — SC's Expansive Interpretation (Jan 2026)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Predecessors: TADA (Terrorist and Disruptive Activities Prevention Act, 1985–95)POTO/POTA (2001–04)UAPA (enhanced from 2004).


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Act Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 (Act No. 37 of 1967)
Administering Ministry Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA)
Key Section Section 15 — defines "Terrorist Act"
Section 15(1)(a) language "Bombs, dynamite or other explosive substances… firearms or other lethal weapons… poisonous or noxious gases… or by any other substances (whether biological, radioactive, nuclear or otherwise) of a hazardous nature or by any other means of whatever nature"
Residuary clause "By any other means" — the SC relied on this to expand the definition beyond conventional weapons [S1][S3]
Trigger for terror acts Intent to threaten unity, integrity, security, economic security, or sovereignty of India OR to strike terror in people
Section 43D(5) Stringent bail provision — bail denied if court finds prima facie case; accused cannot secure bail merely by denying charges
Amendments 1967 (original), 2004, 2008, 2012, 2019
2019 Key change Individual designation as terrorist (without court conviction)
NIA Act, 2008 National Investigation Agency — primary agency for UAPA cases
Investigating Agency NIA / State police (with NIA oversight)
Scheduled Organisations First Schedule lists banned organisations

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Geopolitical / Strategic

Ethical / Governance

Historical

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. UAPA was originally enacted in 1967 as Act No. 37 of 1967; Chapter IV on "Terrorist Acts" was added by the 2004 amendment. [S6]
  2. Section 15 of UAPA defines "Terrorist Act"; the residuary phrase "by any other means" was relied upon by SC (Jan 2026) to expand the definition beyond conventional weapons. [S1][S3]
  3. The January 2026 SC ruling was delivered by a Bench headed by Justice Arvind Kumar. [S1]
  4. Accused denied bail: Umar Khalid and Sharjeel Imam in the Delhi riots "larger conspiracy" case related to February 2020 riots. [S1][S5]
  5. Under Section 43D(5) of UAPA, bail is denied if there exists prima facie material connecting the accused to the offence — a stricter standard than ordinary CrPC bail. [S3]
  6. UAPA 2019 amendment (key change): Empowered the government to designate individuals as terrorists (previously only organisations could be designated). [S7]
  7. Administering Ministry: UAPA is administered by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA). [S6]
  8. NIA (National Investigation Agency) is the primary agency for investigating UAPA offences; established under NIA Act, 2008. [S6]
  9. SC held that confining Section 15 to only conventional modes of violence would be "to unduly narrow its ambit contrary to plain language." [S1]
  10. Disruption of essential commodities (e.g., via chakka jams) was held by SC to constitute a terrorist act under UAPA if done with requisite intent. [S1][S3]
  11. Predecessors to UAPA: TADA (1985–95)POTA (2002–04) → enhanced UAPA (2004 onwards). [S6]
  12. Maximum police custody under UAPA: 30 days (compared to 15 days under CrPC). [S6]
  13. Time for filing chargesheet under UAPA extended to 180 days (from 90 days under CrPC). [S6]
  14. Section 15(1)(a) specifically covers substances that are "biological, radioactive, nuclear or otherwise of a hazardous nature" — listing that forms the exhaustive-yet-open-ended definition of the means of a terrorist act. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Indian Constitution — Fundamental Rights (Articles 19, 21); Judiciary; Important Judgments
GS-II Governance — Security agencies, anti-terror legislation
GS-III Internal Security — Terrorism; Role of external actors; Linkages between organised crime and terrorism
GS-IV Ethics in governance — civil liberties vs national security dilemma

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "The Supreme Court's January 2026 ruling that a 'terrorist act' under UAPA is the culmination of conspiratorial activities, not just the final act of violence, has far-reaching implications for civil liberties and national security. Critically evaluate." (GS-II/GS-III)

  2. "The UAPA's stringent bail provisions under Section 43D(5) have been repeatedly flagged as violating the 'bail is the rule, jail is the exception' principle. Examine the tension between personal liberty under Article 21 and India's counter-terrorism framework." (GS-II)

  3. "Anti-terror legislation in India has evolved from TADA through POTA to UAPA. Trace this evolution and assess whether the incremental broadening of 'terrorist act' definitions adequately balances security imperatives with constitutional rights." (GS-III / Essay)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

  1. UAPA 2019 Amendment — individual designation as terrorist; constitutionality challenges before SC.
  2. NIA (National Investigation Agency) — structure, jurisdiction, landmark cases, NIA Act 2008.
  3. Section 43D(5) UAPA — Bail JurisprudenceWatali (2019), Vernon Gonsalves (2023), Zubair (2022) — evolution of bail standard under special laws.
  4. Article 19 vs National Security — reasonable restrictions under Article 19(2); sedition (Section 124A IPC now repealed), UAPA overlap.
  5. FATF and India — India's FATF membership, mutual evaluation, anti-money laundering & counter-terrorism financing obligations (AML/CFT).
  6. Delhi Communal Violence (February 2020) — factual background, FIRs, NIA/Delhi Police investigation, international dimensions.
  7. UN Security Council Resolution 1373 (2001) — global counter-terrorism framework, India's obligations, CTITF.
  8. Sedition Law Repeal / BNS 2023 — how new Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita handles sedition-adjacent offences vs UAPA overlap.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. UAPA vs POTA confusion: POTA was repealed in 2004; UAPA (originally 1967) was amended in 2004 to absorb POTA-like provisions — they are not the same Act.
  2. "Individual designation" is 2019, not 2008: The power to designate individuals as terrorists was added by the 2019 amendment, not the 2008 amendment. The 2008 amendment strengthened organisation listing and NIA powers.
  3. Section 43D(5) applies only at bail stage: Aspirants confuse this with the quantum of punishment — Section 43D(5) is about bail denial, not conviction standard.
  4. MHA vs NIA: MHA administers UAPA; NIA investigates — two different bodies; questions often conflate them.
  5. "Terrorist act" ≠ "unlawful activity": UAPA has two distinct parts — Chapter II (unlawful activities, mainly secessionist) and Chapter IV (terrorist acts) — they carry different penalties and procedural rules; do not conflate.

11. Sources