SC asks govt. if Wangchuk saw videos used as proof

Web searches hit domain-access blocks. Proceeding entirely from the article excerpt (Tier 4 primary source) plus established statutory/constitutional knowledge, which is sufficient.


SC Questions Govt. on Sonam Wangchuk's Detention: NSA & Evidence Disclosure


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Legislation National Security Act (NSA), 1980
Enacted September 23, 1980
Administered by Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA)
Detention Authority District Magistrate / State Govt. / Central Govt.
Maximum Detention Period 12 months (extendable in 3-month increments)
Review Mechanism Advisory Board (within 7 weeks per Supreme Court rulings)
Constitutional Basis Article 22(3)(b) — preventive detention permissible as exception to Article 22 guarantees
Grounds for Detention (NSA) National security, public order, maintenance of essential services
Disclosure Requirement Article 22(5): must communicate grounds "as soon as may be"; Article 22(6): grounds may be withheld if disclosure against public interest
Detainee's Right Representation to Advisory Board; NO right to legal counsel before Advisory Board (per NSA, s.11)
Wangchuk's Jail Jodhpur Central Jail, Rajasthan
Detention Duration (as of Feb 13, 2026) ~5 months
Videos cited by govt. 23 total; 4 disputed
SC Bench Justices Aravind Kumar and P.B. Varale
Govt. represented by ASG K.M. Nataraj

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Geopolitical / Strategic

Ethical / Governance

Social

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The National Security Act (NSA) was enacted in 1980; it allows preventive detention for up to 12 months.
  2. Under the NSA, the District Magistrate (or State/Central Govt.) can order detention without trial.
  3. Article 22(5) of the Constitution mandates communicating grounds of detention to the detainee "as soon as may be."
  4. Article 22(6) permits withholding grounds of detention if disclosure is "against public interest."
  5. The NSA provides no right to legal counsel before the Advisory Board (Section 11, NSA 1980).
  6. The Advisory Board under NSA must report within 7 weeks of detention order.
  7. Sonam Wangchuk was awarded the Padma Shri in 2018 for his work in education and innovation in Ladakh.
  8. Wangchuk's movement demands inclusion of Ladakh under the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution (tribal area protections).
  9. The SC bench hearing the Wangchuk case comprised Justices Aravind Kumar and P.B. Varale.
  10. Government cited 23 videos as grounds for detention; Wangchuk's counsel says 4 were not supplied.
  11. Wangchuk was held at Jodhpur Central Jail, Rajasthan — not within Ladakh UT.
  12. The NSA is administered by the Ministry of Home Affairs (not Ministry of Law).
  13. Ladakh became a Union Territory (without legislature) on October 31, 2019, under the J&K Reorganisation Act, 2019.
  14. The foundational SC case testing NSA's constitutionality is A.K. Roy v. Union of India (1982).
  15. Preventive detention laws are placed in the Concurrent List (List III, Entry 3) of the Seventh Schedule.

8. Mains Relevance

Aspect Detail
GS Paper GS-II (Polity & Governance); GS-IV (Ethics — civil liberties vs. state security)
Syllabus Heading GS-II: "Statutory, regulatory and quasi-judicial bodies"; "Fundamental Rights"; "Separation of powers between Union and States"; "Functioning of the Judiciary"
GS-IV link Ethics of preventive detention; balancing national security vs. individual liberty

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "Preventive detention laws in India have historically been instruments of executive overreach. Critically examine the constitutional safeguards and their adequacy in light of recent cases."
  2. "The non-disclosure of evidence in NSA detention orders raises serious questions about natural justice. Discuss the interplay of Article 22(5), Article 22(6), and the right to make an effective representation."
  3. "Ladakh's demand for Sixth Schedule inclusion reflects a broader crisis of identity and governance in India's border Union Territories. Analyse."

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Security Act, 1980 Central statute at issue; its provisions, history, and SC interpretations
Article 22 — Preventive Detention Constitutional framework enabling and limiting NSA-type laws
Sixth Schedule of the Constitution Wangchuk's primary demand; tribal autonomous councils in NE India
J&K Reorganisation Act, 2019 Created Ladakh as a UT; changed the governance framework directly relevant here
Habeas Corpus (Article 32 / 226) The legal remedy used to challenge unlawful detention; landmark cases
AFSPA (Armed Forces Special Powers Act) Another law cited for border/security areas; similar civil liberties tensions
Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978) Expanded procedural due process; basis for "right to be heard" arguments
Advisory Board mechanism under NSA Quasi-judicial check on executive detention; its composition and functioning

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. NSA vs. UAPA: Aspirants confuse NSA (preventive detention, no criminal trial) with UAPA (anti-terror statute with criminal prosecution). NSA does not require FIR or chargesheet.
  2. Implementing Ministry: NSA is under MHA, not Ministry of Law and Justice.
  3. Sixth Schedule vs. Fifth Schedule: Wangchuk demands Sixth Schedule (applies to tribal areas of Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram — autonomous district councils). The Fifth Schedule governs Scheduled Tribes in most other states. Ladakh's inclusion in Sixth Schedule would be unprecedented.
  4. Duration of Detention: Maximum under NSA is 12 months, not 6 months. The 3-month extension increments are the operative mechanic.
  5. Advisory Board ≠ Court: The Advisory Board under NSA is not a court; detainee has no right to a lawyer before it. Aspirants often assume full judicial process applies.

11. Sources

Note: Web retrieval of Tier 1–3 sources was blocked by domain access restrictions during this session. All statutory, constitutional, and case-law facts cited above are grounded in established Indian law (NSA 1980; Constitution of India — Articles 22, Schedule VI, Schedule VII; SC judgments A.K. Roy 1982, Maneka Gandhi 1978), which fall within the knowledge base; the article excerpt is the sole retrieved source.