Is the Supreme Court doing enough to tackle hate speech?


UPSC Study Note: Is the Supreme Court Doing Enough to Tackle Hate Speech?


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1860 IPC enacted: Sections 153A (promoting enmity between groups) and 295A (outraging religious feelings) first enacted by colonial administration. [S1]
1951 First Amendment to Constitution adds public order, decency, morality as grounds for restricting free speech under Art. 19(2).
1984 Ramji Lal Modi v. State of UP — SC upheld constitutional validity of Sec. 295A IPC.
2014 Pravasi Bhalai Sangathan v. Union of India — SC recommended Parliament enact a specific hate-speech law; Law Commission took up the issue (Report 267, 2017).
2017 Law Commission Report No. 267 proposed dedicated hate-speech provisions (new Sections 153C and 505A IPC); never legislated.
2018 Tehseen Poonawalla v. Union of India — SC issued guidelines to states on mob lynching/hate crimes; directed police action on hate speech instigators.
2021 Batch of PILs filed before SC alleging inaction by state police on hate speeches by public figures.
2023 Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 (Act 45 of 2023) replaces IPC; largely retains Sections 153A/295A (renumbered as Sections 196/298 BNS). No new hate-speech offence added. [S2]
2024 Amish Devgan v. Union of India — SC reiterated that Art. 19(2) permits restrictions on speech that promotes enmity.
2026 SC directs pending hate-speech PILs to respective High Courts. [S3]

4. Core Static Facts

Definitions & Terminology - Hate speech: No statutory definition in Indian law; Law Commission (Report 267) defined it as expression that vilifies/intimidates/incites hatred against groups. - Communal speech: Subtype targeting religion/community; overlaps with IPC/BNS provisions. - Incitement: Key legal threshold — not all offensive speech constitutes criminal hate speech; incitement to imminent violence is the classic test.

Enabling Legal Provisions

Provision Subject
IPC Sec. 153A / BNS Sec. 196 Promoting enmity between groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, language, etc. — up to 3 years imprisonment (5 years if in place of worship/assembly). [S1]
IPC Sec. 295A / BNS Sec. 298 Deliberate/malicious acts to outrage religious feelings — up to 3 years / fine / both. [S1]
IPC Sec. 505 / BNS Sec. 353 Statements conducing to public mischief. [S1]
IT Act Sec. 66A Online offensive content — struck down by SC in Shreya Singhal v. UoI (2015) as unconstitutional.
RPA Sec. 123(3A) Appeals on grounds of religion, race, caste, community — corrupt electoral practice.
RPA Sec. 8 Disqualification of convicted persons.

Implementing Bodies - Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) — directs state police action; issues advisories. [S4] - State Police — primary law-enforcement agency; cognisance and FIR filing. - Supreme Court / High Courts — supervisory jurisdiction via Art. 32 / 226. - National Commission for Minorities / NHRC — recommendatory bodies.

Key SC Benches / Judgments on Hate Speech

Case Year Key Ruling
Ramji Lal Modi v. UP 1957 Sec. 295A constitutionally valid
Pravasi Bhalai Sangathan 2014 Urged Parliament to legislate; SC's own power limited
Shreya Singhal 2015 Sec. 66A IT Act struck down; distinguished "discussion/advocacy" from "incitement"
Tehseen Poonawalla 2018 Guidelines on mob lynching; hate-speech accountability
Amish Devgan 2020–24 Art. 19(2) allows restriction on enmity-promoting speech

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Social

Ethical / Governance

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. IPC Section 153A criminalises promoting enmity between groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, language, etc. — maximum punishment 3 years (5 years if in a place of worship). [S1]
  2. IPC Section 295A addresses deliberate/malicious acts to outrage religious feelings — punishable up to 3 years imprisonment. [S1]
  3. Section 66A of the IT Act (online offensive content) was struck down by the SC in Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015) as unconstitutional.
  4. Law Commission Report No. 267 (2017) recommended inserting new Sections 153C and 505A into IPC to deal specifically with hate speech — never enacted.
  5. Pravasi Bhalai Sangathan v. Union of India (2014): SC urged Parliament to legislate against hate speech — the earliest modern apex court nudge on this issue.
  6. Tehseen Poonawalla v. Union of India (2018): SC issued guidelines to states on mob lynching and directing police action on hate speech instigators.
  7. Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 (Act 45 of 2023) replaced IPC effective July 1, 2024; corresponding hate-speech sections are 196 (≈153A) and 298 (≈295A). [S2]
  8. Prosecution under IPC Sec. 153A / BNS Sec. 196 requires prior sanction of the state government — a key procedural filter.
  9. Article 19(2) permits restrictions on free speech on grounds including public order, decency, morality, incitement to offence — the constitutional basis for hate-speech laws.
  10. The CJI heading the Bench that redirected hate-speech PILs in early 2026 was Justice Surya Kant. [S3]
  11. Gauhati High Court (not SC) issued notice to Assam CM Sarma on communal speech petitions in February 2026. [S3]
  12. The SC distinguished "discussion, advocacy, incitement" in Shreya Singhal — only incitement can be restricted under Art. 19(2).
  13. Representation of People Act Section 123(3A): Appeals on grounds of religion for votes constitute a corrupt electoral practice.
  14. India has no single dedicated hate-speech statute — provisions are scattered across IPC/BNS, RPA, and IT Act.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Indian Constitution — features, amendments, significant provisions; Structure, organisation, functioning of Judiciary; Mechanisms, laws, institutions and bodies for protection of vulnerable sections
GS-IV Ethics in public life; Human values; Tolerance and moral reasoning
GS-I Social empowerment; Communalism; Regionalism

Plausible Mains Questions 1. "The Supreme Court's redirection of hate-speech petitions to High Courts reflects judicial pragmatism, not abdication." Critically evaluate with reference to constitutional provisions and recent judicial developments. (GS-II, 250 words) 2. "India's scattered legal framework against hate speech — IPC, IT Act, RPA — is insufficient to address its 21st-century digital manifestations." Discuss the need for a dedicated hate-speech legislation, drawing on Law Commission recommendations. (GS-II, 250 words) 3. "Free speech and public order are not binary opposites." Analyse the constitutional balance struck by Indian courts in hate-speech cases, citing landmark judgments. (GS-II / Essay)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Article 19 — Freedom of Speech & Restrictions Direct constitutional basis for both hate-speech protection and its limits
Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 Replaced IPC; understand renumbered sections on communal offences
Law Commission of India — Report 267 (2017) Foundational policy document on hate-speech legislation
Mob Lynching and SC Guidelines (Tehseen Poonawalla) Overlap between hate speech and physical violence; accountability framework
Right to Equality (Articles 14–18) Hate speech attacks the dignity dimension of equality rights
Media Regulation & Press Freedom TV/digital amplification of hate speech; TRAI, MIB, and content moderation
Communalism and Secularism in India Historical-social context without which hate-speech jurisprudence is decontextualised
Electoral Law — RPA 1951 Hate speech intersects with corrupt electoral practices during campaigns

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Section 153A with 295A: 153A = promoting enmity between groups; 295A = outraging religious feelings of a class. Different thresholds; different targets. Don't conflate.
  2. Assuming Sec. 66A IT Act is still in force: It was struck down in 2015 (Shreya Singhal). Citing it as a live provision is a fatal error.
  3. Attributing Law Commission Report 267 to NHRC: Report 267 (2017) is a Law Commission of India document, not NHRC.
  4. Thinking BNS 2023 created new hate-speech offences: It did not — it merely renumbered IPC provisions. The legislature did not act on Law Commission recommendations.
  5. Conflating PIL closure with lack of remedy: The SC's January 2026 direction did not shut down the cases permanently — it directed parties to High Courts under Art. 226, which remains fully available.
  6. Prior sanction requirement: Students often forget that prosecution under Sec. 153A IPC / BNS 196 requires state government sanction — a crucial procedural safeguard that also enables political gatekeeping.

11. Sources