The politics around custodial deaths
Here is the complete UPSC study note on The Politics around Custodial Deaths.
The Politics around Custodial Deaths
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Custodial death refers to the death of a person while in the custody of the state — police custody or judicial (prison) custody. [S1]
- It is a direct violation of Article 21 (Right to Life) of the Constitution, which cannot be suspended even under detention.
- NCRB is the nodal body for compiling annual data on custodial deaths through its Crime in India and Prison Statistics India reports, making this a data-rich topic. [S3]
- Politically, custodial deaths are weaponised by Opposition parties to target ruling governments on police accountability — a recurring pattern visible across states (most recently Andhra Pradesh, 2026). [S6]
2. Why in the News
- Andhra Pradesh (May–June 2026): Gade Sai Krishna was picked up by Circle Inspector S.S.V.V. Nagaraju of Krishnalanka Police Station, Vijayawada (NTR district), on 9 May 2026 from his residence in Markapuram for questioning in old cases. He has been missing since. [S6]
- His mother G. Vijaya Lakshmi filed a habeas corpus petition in the Andhra Pradesh High Court on 2 June 2026. [S6]
- The AP High Court ordered the NTR Police Commissionerate to produce Sai Krishna by 15 June 2026; deadline was missed; court further directed production on 29 June 2026. [S6]
- Opposition response: YSRCP president and former CM Jagan Mohan Reddy accused the ruling TDP-led government of "Red Book" governance and systemic police excesses. Congress also joined the attack. [S6]
- The case is being shaped by the Opposition as a narrative of custodial torture and death being hushed up by the police — a classic political template. [S6]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1978 | Sunil Batra v. Delhi Administration — Supreme Court affirmed that rights of prisoners are protected under Art. 21 |
| 1993 | Protection of Human Rights Act enacted; NHRC established under Section 3 to investigate custodial deaths [S2] |
| 1995 | NCRB begins publishing Prison Statistics India annually [S3] |
| 1996 | D.K. Basu v. State of West Bengal — SC laid down landmark guidelines (11 mandatory requirements) for arrest and detention |
| 2005 | CrPC Section 176 amended — mandatory judicial inquiry in cases of death/disappearance in police custody or rape of woman in custody [S2] |
| 2009 | Prevention of Torture Bill introduced in Lok Sabha (lapsed) |
| 2016 | Model Prison Manual 2016 issued by MHA to standardise prison management [S4] |
| 2023 | Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023 replaces CrPC; provisions on arrest, remand, and judicial oversight carried forward [S5] |
4. Core Static Facts
Definitions & Classifications: - Police custody death: Death while in the physical custody of police (during interrogation, lock-up period, transit). - Judicial custody death: Death while lodged in prison/jail under court order. - NCRB tracks both under separate categories in Crime in India (Chapter: Crimes by/against Police) and Prison Statistics India. [S3]
Key Legal/Statutory Framework: - Article 21, Constitution of India — Right to life; cannot be violated even in custody. - Article 22 — Protections against arbitrary arrest and detention. - Section 176, CrPC (now BNSS equivalent) — Mandatory judicial/magistrate inquiry into custodial deaths [S2]. - Section 357, CrPC — Courts empowered to award compensation to victims. [S2] - Section 18, Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993 — NHRC can recommend compensation/damages to concerned government. [S2] - D.K. Basu Guidelines (1996) — 11 binding requirements: memo of arrest, informing relatives, medical examination every 48 hours, prohibition of third-degree, etc.
Implementing Bodies: - NHRC (National Human Rights Commission) — receives mandatory intimation of every custodial death within 24 hours; investigates and recommends compensation. [S2] - NCRB (under MHA) — compiles and publishes custodial death data. [S1] - State Human Rights Commissions (SHRCs) — parallel body at state level.
Key Numbers (NHRC data): - NHRC has handled 2,194 cases of custodial death: 1,974 deaths in judicial custody, 220 deaths/rapes in police custody, 1 death in para-military custody. [S2] - India averages 5–6 deaths per day in custody (combined police + judicial) per NCRB annual reports.
Writ Remedy: - Habeas Corpus (Art. 32/226) — primary judicial remedy to produce a missing detainee; used in the Andhra Pradesh case (June 2026). [S6]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Art. 21 imposes positive obligations on the state — the SC held in Francis Coralie Mullin (1981) that the right to life includes the right to live with dignity.
- D.K. Basu guidelines are binding, not merely advisory; violation itself attracts contempt of court.
- BNSS 2023 retained mandatory judicial inquiry provisions but critics note no dedicated anti-torture statute exists in India; the 2009 Prevention of Torture Bill lapsed. [S5]
Ethical / Governance
- Mandatory reporting to NHRC within 24 hours of custodial death is routinely violated by states. [S2]
- NHRC guidelines translated into regional languages per MHA directive — yet enforcement remains weak. [S2]
- "Red Book" policing (alleged in AP 2026) refers to a system where police maintain unofficial dossiers on perceived enemies/criminals, enabling extrajudicial targeting. [S6]
Political / Administrative
- Custodial deaths follow a predictable political cycle: incident → Opposition outcry → habeas corpus → HC/SC intervention → inquiry commission → dilution.
- State police being a State List (Entry 2, 7th Schedule) subject limits the Centre's direct role; MHA can only issue advisories and guidelines.
- NHRC jurisdiction does not extend to the armed forces (Section 19, PHR Act 1993) — a significant gap.
Social
- Victims are disproportionately from marginalised communities — Dalits, tribals, minorities — raising caste/class dimensions.
- Custodial torture often targets individuals with alleged criminal history (as in the AP case), generating public ambivalence and enabling police impunity.
Historical
- Colonial legacy: the Third Degree interrogation method was institutionalised by British police; the Indian Police Act, 1861 (since replaced by new state laws) gave wide discretionary powers.
- Mulla Committee on Jail Reforms (1980–83) was the first major post-Independence review of prison conditions, whose implementation remains partial. [S4]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- May 9, 2026 (AP): Gade Sai Krishna picked up from Markapuram, Andhra Pradesh by Krishnalanka police; missing since. [S6]
- June 2, 2026: Habeas corpus filed in AP High Court by victim's mother. [S6]
- June 15, 2026: AP High Court deadline for production — missed by NTR Police Commissionerate. [S6]
- June 29, 2026: Next AP High Court hearing date for production. [S6]
- BNSS, 2023 (in force from July 1, 2024): New criminal procedure code; retains custodial safeguards but introduces 90-day police custody (in specified serious offences) — critics flag this as expanded detention power. [S5]
- NHRC has continued to issue notices to state governments and recommend compensation in custodial death cases.
7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)
- NHRC is constituted under Section 3 of the Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993. [S2]
- States must report every custodial death to NHRC within 24 hours. [S2]
- Section 176 CrPC (now BNSS equivalent) mandates a judicial/magistrate inquiry in every case of death in police custody. [S2]
- D.K. Basu v. State of West Bengal (1996) — SC case that established binding arrest and detention guidelines. [S2]
- NCRB's annual publication tracking prison deaths is titled "Prison Statistics India" (first edition: 1995). [S3]
- Custodial deaths data is compiled by NCRB under the Ministry of Home Affairs. [S1]
- Article 22 of the Constitution provides safeguards against arbitrary arrest and detention.
- Section 18 of the PHR Act, 1993 empowers NHRC to recommend compensation to the concerned government. [S2]
- NHRC jurisdiction does not cover the Armed Forces (Section 19, PHR Act, 1993).
- Habeas Corpus writ (Article 32/226) is the primary legal remedy available to a detainee or their family when a person is unlawfully detained or missing in custody. [S6]
- The Model Prison Manual 2016 was issued by MHA to standardise prison administration. [S4]
- Police is a State List subject — Entry 2, Seventh Schedule of the Constitution.
- The Prevention of Torture Bill, 2009 — introduced in Lok Sabha, referred to Select Committee, lapsed without enactment.
- NHRC has handled a total of 2,194 custodial death cases (as of available data): 1,974 judicial + 220 police + 1 paramilitary. [S2]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping: - GS-II: Governance, Constitutional Bodies (NHRC), Separation of Powers, Federalism (Police as State subject), Fundamental Rights (Art. 21, 22) - GS-IV: Ethics in public administration; custodial torture as an ethical/governance failure; police accountability
Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "Statutory, regulatory and quasi-judicial bodies" (NHRC) - GS-II: "Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability" - GS-IV: "Probity in governance — ethical dilemmas in administration"
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Custodial deaths in India reflect a systemic failure of accountability in the criminal justice system. Critically examine the legal and institutional safeguards available and their limitations." 2. "The political exploitation of custodial deaths often overshadows the need for structural reform of police accountability. Discuss with reference to recent incidents." 3. "Despite D.K. Basu guidelines and mandatory NHRC reporting, custodial violence persists in India. Suggest a multi-pronged reform strategy."
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| D.K. Basu Guidelines (1996) | Core SC-mandated procedural law on arrest; directly examined alongside custodial death |
| NHRC — Composition and Powers | Statutory body mandated to address custodial deaths; frequently appears in Prelims |
| Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 | New CrPC; changed provisions on remand, custody, and trial timelines |
| Prison Reforms in India | Judicial custody deaths, overcrowding, under-trials — same data ecosystem (NCRB Prison Statistics) |
| Police Reforms (Prakash Singh Case, 2006) | SC-mandated police reforms; structural fix to the same accountability gap |
| Habeas Corpus — Landmark Cases | ADM Jabalpur (1976), Maneka Gandhi (1978) — foundational cases on custodial rights |
| Dalit/Minority Vulnerability in Custody | Social dimension; intersects with SC/ST Atrocities Act, caste-based police targeting |
| Prevention of Torture — International Framework (CAT) | India signed but has not ratified UN Convention Against Torture (1987) — a live Prelims fact |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- NHRC vs. State Human Rights Commission: NHRC handles custodial deaths involving central forces and cross-state matters; SHRCs handle state police cases — but in practice NHRC takes up many state cases too under suo motu cognizance. Don't conflate their jurisdiction.
- "Police custody" ≠ "Judicial custody": These are tracked separately by NCRB and NHRC; police custody = physical lock-up; judicial custody = prison under court order. Numbers differ sharply — judicial deaths vastly outnumber police custody deaths.
- D.K. Basu year confusion: The case was decided in 1996, not 1993 (which is the year of the PHR Act). Common mix-up.
- Section 176 CrPC mandates judicial/magistrate inquiry — NOT a police inquiry. Aspirants often write "police inquiry" which misses the point of the amendment.
- India has NOT ratified the UN Convention Against Torture (CAT) — it signed in 1997 but ratification is pending. Do not state that India is bound by CAT.
- Police is NOT a Concurrent List subject — it is firmly on the State List (Entry 2). The Centre can only issue advisories; it cannot directly regulate state police.
11. Sources
- [S1] National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) — Statistics Overview — https://ncrb.gov.in/en/statistics — (Tier 1)
- [S2] NHRC Selected Guidelines on Custodial Deaths/Rapes, MHA — https://www.mha.gov.in/sites/default/files/2025-04/NHRCselectedlettersandguidelinesondeathsincustody_09042019_0[1]_4.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S3] Prison Statistics India, NCRB — https://ncrb.gov.in/en/prison-statistics-india — (Tier 1)
- [S4] Model Prison Manual 2016, MHA — https://www.mha.gov.in/sites/default/files/2025-04/PrisonManualA2016_20122024_2.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S5] Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 — PRS India — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-bharatiya-nagarik-suraksha-sanhita-2023 — (Tier 1/PRS)
- [S6] "The politics around custodial deaths" — Sumit Bhattacharjee, The Hindu, 29 June 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-29/th_international/articleGDPG67HMP-15136466.ece — (Tier 4)