‘No AFSPA in most of Northeast from 2027’


UPSC Study Note: 'No AFSPA in Most of Northeast from 2027'


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1958 AFSPA enacted; initially applied to Assam and Manipur amid insurgencies
1972 Amended — extended to Meghalaya, Nagaland, Tripura, and Arunachal Pradesh [S2]
1990 Separate AF(J&K)SP Act, 1990 enacted for Jammu & Kashmir [S2]
1990 Entire Assam declared Disturbed Area under AFSPA [S3]
1995 Entire Nagaland declared Disturbed Area [S3]
2004 Manipur (except Imphal Municipality) declared Disturbed Area [S3]
2015 AFSPA fully withdrawn from Tripura [S3]
2018 AFSPA fully withdrawn from Meghalaya [S3]
April 2022 First phased reduction of disturbed areas in Nagaland, Assam, Manipur [S4]
April 2023 Further reduction of disturbed areas in the three remaining NE states [S4]
June 2026 Home Minister announces near-complete withdrawal by 2027 [Article]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Geopolitical / Strategic

Social / Human Rights

Administrative / Governance

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. AFSPA was first enacted in 1958 and initially applied to Assam and Manipur. [S2]
  2. After the 1972 amendment, AFSPA's coverage extended to Meghalaya, Nagaland, Tripura, and Arunachal Pradesh. [S2]
  3. A separate Act — Armed Forces (Jammu & Kashmir) Special Powers Act — was enacted in 1990 for J&K. [S2]
  4. AFSPA was completely withdrawn from Tripura in 2015 and Meghalaya in 2018. [S3]
  5. Section 3 of AFSPA empowers Central/State governments to declare an area "disturbed." [S2]
  6. Section 6 of AFSPA grants immunity from prosecution to armed forces personnel acting in good faith. [S2]
  7. The Jeevan Reddy Committee (2005) recommended repeal of AFSPA — its recommendations were not implemented.
  8. As of June 2026, over 80% of the Northeast is already free from AFSPA. [S1]
  9. HM Amit Shah's June 2026 announcement was made in the context of signing a tripartite MoU on mineral/oil operations in the Assam–Nagaland border area. [Article]
  10. The Supreme Court upheld AFSPA's constitutional validity in Naga People's Movement of Human Rights v. Union of India (1997).
  11. The EEVFAM v. Union of India (2016) SC ruling mandated inquiry into alleged encounter deaths in Manipur, a direct consequence of AFSPA-related operations.
  12. Implementing ministry for Disturbed Area notifications: Ministry of Home Affairs. [S2]
  13. AFSPA derives constitutional support from Article 355 and Entry 2A of the Union List. [S2]
  14. 12 peace accords were signed in the Northeast between 2019 and 2026 under the Modi government. [S1]
  15. Violent incidents in the Northeast declined by approximately 80% since 2019. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Statutory, regulatory and various quasi-judicial bodies; Separation of powers; Functioning of constitutional institutions
GS-II Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector / Services; Issues relating to Centre–State relations
GS-III Internal security challenges through communication networks, role of media and social networking sites, basics of cyber security; Role of external state and non-state actors in creating challenges to internal security; Various Security forces and agencies and their mandate

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "The phased withdrawal of AFSPA from the Northeast is both a security imperative and a human rights necessity. Critically examine." (GS-III)
  2. "Critically analyse the constitutional validity and ethical concerns surrounding AFSPA, in light of recent Supreme Court rulings and the government's 2027 withdrawal roadmap." (GS-II)
  3. "The June 2026 Assam–Nagaland tripartite MoU on mineral exploration and the concurrent AFSPA withdrawal signal a new paradigm in India's Northeast policy. Discuss." (GS-II / GS-III)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Disturbed Areas Act, 1976 Companion legislation that enables AFSPA; must be declared first before AFSPA applies
Naga Peace Accord / Framework Agreement (2015) Central to reducing insurgency in Nagaland — directly enabling AFSPA withdrawal in that state
Irom Sharmila and Civil Society Resistance Humanises the political economy of AFSPA and anti-AFSPA movements for GS-IV/Essay
Act East Policy AFSPA rollback is integral to positioning Northeast as India's gateway to ASEAN
Bodoland Territorial Council / BTAD Example of conflict resolution in Northeast (Assam); complements peace-first AFSPA logic
Armed Forces (J&K) Special Powers Act, 1990 Parallel legislation; post-370 demands for withdrawal directly linked to Northeast precedent
Fifth and Sixth Schedules (Constitution) Tribal autonomy provisions relevant to conflict-affected NE communities
UN Declaration on Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) International human-rights framework cited by critics of AFSPA's impact on tribal communities

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Conflating AFSPA 1958 with AF(J&K)SPA 1990: These are two separate Acts. J&K has its own 1990 legislation; AFSPA 1958 does not apply there.
  2. Wrong withdrawal dates: Tripura — 2015 (not 2018); Meghalaya — 2018 (not 2015). Aspirants frequently swap these two.
  3. Wrong implementing ministry: AFSPA is under MHA (disturbed area notification) and MoD (deployment) — not solely one ministry.
  4. Assuming AFSPA requires a state of emergency: AFSPA is triggered by "disturbed area" notification (Section 3), not by a National/State Emergency under Articles 352/356.
  5. Mizoram confusion: AFSPA was withdrawn from Mizoram in the 1980s (post-Mizo Accord, 1986) — aspirants sometimes place this removal in the 2015–2018 wave alongside Tripura/Meghalaya.

11. Sources