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
- Hate speech refers to expression that incites hostility, discrimination, or violence against identifiable groups (religion, race, caste, ethnicity); India has no single statutory definition. [S1]
- The issue sits at the constitutional tension between Article 19(1)(a) (freedom of speech) and Article 19(2) (reasonable restrictions in the interests of sovereignty, public order, decency).
- Relevant to GS-II (Judiciary, Fundamental Rights) and GS-IV (Ethics, social harmony); frequently surfaces in Mains and Prelims as courts grapple with the absence of a dedicated hate-speech law.
- The Supreme Court's role — proactive vs. restrained — has become a live controversy with pending PILs dating to 2021 and a pivotal redirection order in early 2026. [S3]
2. Why in the News
- January 2026: A Supreme Court Bench indicated that hate speech matters pending before it since 2021 would be closed, while clarifying parties were free to approach High Courts. [S3]
- February 26, 2026: The Gauhati High Court issued notice to Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on a batch of petitions seeking criminal prosecution for alleged communal/divisive speeches. [S3]
- The SC, in a three-judge Bench headed by CJI Surya Kant, had earlier directed the same petitioners to approach the Gauhati HC, remarking that courts risk becoming a "political battleground" near elections. [S3]
- These events reignited the debate on whether the apex court is abdicating its constitutional duty of protecting minorities from hate speech.
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
- India follows the "incitement" test (narrower than the UN Rabat Plan of Action's six-part test for criminalising hate speech) — making prosecution difficult without proof of imminent violence. [S3]
- Article 19(2) allows restrictions in interests of sovereignty, security of state, friendly relations, public order, decency, morality, contempt of court, defamation, incitement to offence — hate speech could fit "public order" or "incitement," but courts apply these cautiously.
- The SC's January 2026 closure direction raises questions about abdication of writ jurisdiction under Art. 32 — a fundamental right in itself (Romesh Thappar line of cases).
- BNS 2023 missed the Law Commission's 2017 recommendation to add Secs. 153C and 505A; the legislature's silence has forced courts to improvise. [S2]
Social
- Hate speech disproportionately targets religious minorities, Dalits, women, and LGBTQ+ communities — groups with least access to legal redress.
- "Dog-whistle" language, coded cultural references, and regional dialects make legal proof of intent (a required element of Sec. 153A/BNS 196) extremely difficult. [S3]
- Social media amplification converts localised communal rhetoric into nationwide polarisation within hours.
Ethical / Governance
- Selective enforcement: Police FIRs under Sec. 153A are often filed against critics of the government rather than those inciting communal violence — the legal tool is captured for political use.
- The SC's redirection of PILs to High Courts may serve judicial efficiency but places burden on petitioners to litigate across multiple forums simultaneously.
- A chilling effect on legitimate dissent occurs when vague hate-speech provisions are weaponised — courts must balance suppression of harm with protection of political speech. [S3]
Administrative
- State reluctance to prosecute: Sec. 153A/BNS 196 require prior sanction of the state government for prosecution (Sec. 196 CrPC / BNS equivalent) — creating a political filter.
- NHRC and NCM have recommendatory power only; directions can be ignored with impunity.
- Gauhati HC notice (Feb 2026) illustrates that High Courts can be effective when given jurisdiction — but creates patchwork justice across states. [S3]
Historical
- British colonial law drafted Secs. 153A/295A to manage communal tensions in a multi-religious empire, not to protect minority rights — the prosecutorial logic was public-order maintenance, not dignity protection.
- Post-Partition communal violence (1947–48) and anti-Sikh riots (1984) showed the limitations of existing law without robust enforcement.
- The Emergency (1975–77) demonstrated that "public order" exceptions can be weaponised — courts are historically wary of expanding restrictions on speech.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 2026: SC Bench signals closure of hate-speech PILs pending since 2021; parties directed to High Courts. [S3]
- February 7, 2026: Protests in Guwahati against Assam CM's alleged remarks on Bengali-origin Muslims, framing the issue in the context of Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls. [S3]
- February 26, 2026: Gauhati HC issues notice to CM Himanta Biswa Sarma on petitions seeking criminal prosecution for communal speeches. [S3]
- 2024–25: SC in Amish Devgan reaffirmed limits of Art. 19(1)(a) in hate-speech contexts; no new legislative action.
- BNS, 2023 (effective July 1, 2024): Replaces IPC — renumbers but does not strengthen hate-speech provisions; legislative gap persists. [S2]
- Law Commission Report 267 (2017) proposals remain unimplemented as of 2026.
7. Prelims Hooks
- 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]
- IPC Section 295A addresses deliberate/malicious acts to outrage religious feelings — punishable up to 3 years imprisonment. [S1]
- 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.
- Law Commission Report No. 267 (2017) recommended inserting new Sections 153C and 505A into IPC to deal specifically with hate speech — never enacted.
- 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.
- Tehseen Poonawalla v. Union of India (2018): SC issued guidelines to states on mob lynching and directing police action on hate speech instigators.
- 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]
- Prosecution under IPC Sec. 153A / BNS Sec. 196 requires prior sanction of the state government — a key procedural filter.
- 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.
- The CJI heading the Bench that redirected hate-speech PILs in early 2026 was Justice Surya Kant. [S3]
- Gauhati High Court (not SC) issued notice to Assam CM Sarma on communal speech petitions in February 2026. [S3]
- The SC distinguished "discussion, advocacy, incitement" in Shreya Singhal — only incitement can be restricted under Art. 19(2).
- Representation of People Act Section 123(3A): Appeals on grounds of religion for votes constitute a corrupt electoral practice.
- 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
- Confusing Section 153A with 295A: 153A = promoting enmity between groups; 295A = outraging religious feelings of a class. Different thresholds; different targets. Don't conflate.
- 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.
- Attributing Law Commission Report 267 to NHRC: Report 267 (2017) is a Law Commission of India document, not NHRC.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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
- [S1] India Code — Indian Penal Code, 1860 (Sections 153A, 295A, 505) — https://www.indiacode.nic.in/handle/123456789/2263 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] India Code — Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 (Act 45 of 2023) — https://www.indiacode.nic.in/bitstream/123456789/20062/1/a202345.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S3] The Hindu — "Is the Supreme Court doing enough to tackle hate speech?" (March 6, 2026, Print Edition, Page 9) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-06/th_international/articleG5VFM607J-13755608.ece — (Tier 4 / Article fallback primary source)
- [S4] PRS India — The Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 (Bill Track & SC Report) — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-bharatiya-nyaya-sanhita-2023 — (Tier 1)