Why bulldozers threaten due process


Why Bulldozers Threaten Due Process

UPSC Study Note | GS-II | Constitutional Governance & Fundamental Rights


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2021–22 Demolitions begin rising in UP, MP, Gujarat, Delhi, Haryana in the wake of communal incidents or protests; the term "bulldozer justice" coins in public discourse. [S2]
June 2022 Prayagraj demolitions of properties of protest accused garner national attention; High Court issues interim stay in some cases. [S5]
2022–23 Multiple HCs (Allahabad, MP, Rajasthan) pass interim orders restraining demolitions pending hearings.
Jan 2022 – Dec 2023 Approx. 7,40,000 people displaced by State-driven punitive/arbitrary demolitions nationally. [S2]
2024 SC takes suo motu cognisance / consolidates petitions; issues comprehensive guidelines on 13 November 2024. [S3]
2025–26 Allahabad HC continues scrutiny; practice reported as persisting despite SC directions. [S4]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Social

Administrative

Historical

Political / Strategic


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Supreme Court's landmark pan-India guidelines on demolitions were issued on November 13, 2024 in In Re: Directions in the matter of demolition of structures. [S3]
  2. The SC characterised punitive bulldozer demolitions as a "lawless, ruthless state of affairs." [S3]
  3. Non-compliance with SC's demolition guidelines constitutes Contempt of Court; costs are recoverable from the salary of the erring official. [S2]
  4. Approximately 7,40,000 people were displaced by State-driven demolitions between January 1, 2022 and December 31, 2023. [S2]
  5. The constitutional right to shelter flows from Article 21, affirmed in Olga Tellis v. Bombay Municipal Corporation (1985).
  6. Audi alteram partem (hear the other side) is one of the two natural justice principles violated by demolitions without notice.
  7. The Allahabad High Court posed five pointed constitutional questions on bulldozer justice in a case from Hamirpur district, UP (February 2026). [S5]
  8. Bulldozer demolitions most frequently invoked municipal corporation acts and town planning laws as legal cover — not the CrPC.
  9. Article 20(2) (protection against double jeopardy) and Article 300A (right to property) are key constitutional anchors in anti-demolition litigation.
  10. The sequence constitutionally mandated before sanction: Allegation → Investigation → Adjudication → Sanction; demolition collapses it to allegation → sanction. [S5]
  11. Demolitions were documented primarily in Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Delhi, and Haryana post-communal incidents. [S2]
  12. Separation of executive from judiciary (Article 50 — DPSP) is invoked to argue that executive agencies cannot perform the sentencing function of courts.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper GS-II (Polity, Governance, Fundamental Rights, Judiciary)
Specific Syllabus Headings Structure, Organisation and Functioning of the Executive and Judiciary; Rights Issues; Government Policies and Interventions; Separation of Powers; Rule of Law
Secondary Link GS-IV — Ethics: Accountability of public officials; abuse of discretionary power

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "Bulldozer justice represents a collapse of the constitutional sequence from allegation to sanction." Critically examine the Supreme Court's 2024 guidelines in this context and assess their effectiveness. (250 words, GS-II)
  2. "Punitive demolitions by the executive constitute collective punishment and violate the foundational principles of the Indian Constitution." Discuss with reference to constitutional provisions and judicial pronouncements. (250 words, GS-II)
  3. "The persistence of 'bulldozer justice' despite Supreme Court directions raises questions about institutional accountability in Indian governance." Comment. (150 words, GS-II / GS-IV)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Separation of Powers & Basic Structure Doctrine Core constitutional basis for why executive cannot punish — links to Kesavananda Bharati (1973).
Right to Property (Article 300A) Post-44th Amendment, property is a legal right — demolitions must meet the test of lawful authority.
Natural Justice Principles Audi alteram partem and Nemo judex directly violated; foundational to administrative law questions.
Article 21 — Expanded Scope Right to shelter, livelihood, dignity — all threatened by demolitions; rich case-law trail for Mains.
Communal Violence and State Accountability Demolitions are often post-communal trigger; links to hate crime law, state obligation to protect minorities.
Preventive Detention vs. Due Process Parallel theme of executive coercive power bypassing judicial oversight.
Emergency Provisions & Civil Liberties (Historical) Turkman Gate demolitions (1975–77) as historical precedent for bulldozer-style executive action.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Article 21 and Article 19(1)(f): Article 19(1)(f) was deleted by the 44th Amendment (1978); property is now under Article 300A (statutory right, not fundamental right). Don't cite 19(1)(f) in post-1978 contexts.
  2. Assuming demolitions are always illegal: Not all demolitions violate due process — demolition of genuinely encroached/unsafe structures with proper notice is legally permissible. The issue is punitive, notice-free, post-FIR demolitions.
  3. Misattributing the SC verdict year: The landmark pan-India guidelines came on November 13, 2024 — not 2022 or 2023 (when only HC-level stays existed).
  4. Overlooking the Allahabad HC's 2026 role: The 2024 SC judgment did not end the controversy — HC scrutiny in 2026 shows the issue is live and evolving.
  5. Treating this as UP-specific: While UP is the epicentre, demolitions occurred across at least five states — treating it as a single-state law-and-order issue misses the systemic constitutional angle.

11. Sources


Note: The article excerpt (S5) is the primary source for the Allahabad HC episode. SC judgment details corroborated via S2 and S3. No Tier 1 (gov.in) or Tier 2 (UN/World Bank) sources were available for this topic — all factual claims are cross-referenced across multiple Tier 3/4 sources.