Cannot release Wangchuk on health grounds, Centre tells SC
UPSC Study Note: Cannot Release Wangchuk on Health Grounds — Centre Tells SC
1. At a Glance
- Sonam Wangchuk, Ladakh-based climate activist, was detained under the National Security Act (NSA), 1980 on 26 September 2025, two days after deadly violence in Ladakh linked to protests demanding Statehood and Sixth Schedule status for the Union Territory. [S1]
- The Supreme Court (Bench: Justices Aravind Kumar and P.B. Varale) was hearing a habeas corpus petition by Gitanjali Angmo (Wangchuk's wife) challenging the detention as unconstitutional. [S1][S2]
- The Centre, represented by Solicitor-General Tushar Mehta, refused to release Wangchuk even on medical/health grounds, calling the health claims "manufactured and synthetic." [S3]
- The case is a live intersection of preventive detention law, fundamental rights (Arts. 14, 19, 21, 22), judicial review of NSA, and the unresolved political demands of Ladakh — all high-probability UPSC Mains and Prelims themes. [S1][S2]
2. Why in the News
- 24 September 2025: Violent protests in Ladakh demanding Statehood and Sixth Schedule inclusion left 4 people dead and ~90 injured. [S1][S3]
- 26 September 2025: Wangchuk detained under Section 3(2) of the NSA and moved to Jodhpur Central Jail, Rajasthan. [S1][S3]
- October 2025 onwards: Wangchuk's wife filed petition before Supreme Court; SC issued notice to Centre and UT of Ladakh. [S2]
- 12 February 2026: SC hearing where Centre argued against release on health grounds; SC questioned the government's causal link between Wangchuk's alleged "Arab Spring" references and the September 24 violence. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- Ladakh's reorganisation: Under Jammu & Kashmir Reorganisation Act, 2019, J&K was bifurcated; Ladakh became a Union Territory without a legislature on 31 October 2019. [Background knowledge — no separate source needed]
- Sixth Schedule demand: Ladakh's tribal groups and civil society demanded inclusion in the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution (which provides tribal autonomy / Autonomous District Councils in NE India) to protect land, jobs, and cultural rights.
- Wangchuk's activism: Known globally for ice-stupa innovation; led Climate Fast and Delhi March (2024) demanding Statehood and Sixth Schedule.
- September 2025 violence: Protest turned violent; 4 killed, ~90 injured — triggering preventive detention of Wangchuk under NSA. [S1]
- SC proceedings (Oct 2025 – Feb 2026): Multiple hearings; Centre maintained detention was necessary for public order and national security. [S2][S3]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Detainee | Sonam Wangchuk, climate activist, Ladakh |
| Date of detention | 26 September 2025 |
| Law invoked | National Security Act (NSA), 1980 — Act No. 65 of 1980 |
| Assented | 27 December 1980 (Indira Gandhi government) |
| Key section | Section 3(2) — Central/State Govt. power to detain for preventive purposes |
| Grounds for detention | Prejudicial to security of India / maintenance of public order |
| Place of detention | Jodhpur Central Jail, Rajasthan |
| SC Bench | Justices Aravind Kumar and P.B. Varale |
| Petitioner | Gitanjali Angmo (wife) |
| Centre's counsel | Solicitor-General Tushar Mehta; ASG K.M. Nataraj |
| Duration at time of Feb 2026 hearing | ~5 months |
| Medical examinations | 24 times in 5 months (as stated by ASG) |
| NSA scope | Extends to whole of India (originally excluded J&K) |
| Max detention without Advisory Board | 3 months; extendable to 12 months |
| Constitutional Articles invoked by petitioner | Arts. 14, 19, 21, 22 |
| Linked demand | Statehood + Sixth Schedule status for Ladakh UT |
| September 24, 2025 violence | 4 dead, ~90 injured in Ladakh |
[S1][S2][S4][S5]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- NSA, 1980 (S.3): Allows detention without trial for up to 12 months if the government is satisfied a person's actions are prejudicial to national security or public order; no FIR needed. [S4][S5]
- Art. 22(4)–22(7): Constitution permits preventive detention but mandates Advisory Board review (within 3 weeks if detention exceeds 3 months), communication of grounds, and representation opportunity. [S2]
- Habeas Corpus (Art. 32/226): Wangchuk's wife filed under Art. 32 directly before SC; SC's question — whether there is a proximate causal link between Wangchuk's speech (Arab Spring references) and the violence — reflects the proportionality standard. [S3]
- Precedent concern: SC's scepticism ("Are people sitting on hunger strike going to commit violence?") echoes landmark rulings like A.K. Roy v. Union of India (1982) and Nandlal Bajaj v. State of Punjab on NSA review standards.
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Ladakh borders China (LAC) and Pakistan (LoC); Central government's sensitivity to any instability in the region is strategically acute. [S3]
- Centre's characterisation of Wangchuk as "completely anti-India" signals the government frames the Sixth Schedule/Statehood agitation as a security risk, not merely a political demand.
- Arab Spring analogy (cited by Centre): Suggests the government interprets Wangchuk's rhetoric as potentially inciting mass civil disobedience with destabilisation potential.
Administrative / Governance
- Ladakh as a UT without a legislature has no elected assembly; governance is entirely through a Lt. Governor — a democratic deficit that fuels the Statehood demand. [Background]
- Detention in Rajasthan (Jodhpur), not Ladakh, suggests deliberate distancing to prevent local solidarity mobilisation.
- 1993 data: 72.3% of 3,783 persons detained under NSA were later released for lack of evidence — highlighting systemic abuse of the law. [S4]
Ethical / Governance
- State's claim that health grounds were "manufactured" raises questions about due process: 24 medical examinations in 5 months indicate the detainee's health is a genuine contested issue.
- Tension between executive discretion under preventive detention and judicial oversight — a perennial governance dilemma in India.
- Comparison of Wangchuk to Gandhi (by SC) vs. "chalk and cheese" (by Centre) reflects a deeper dispute over the legitimacy of civil disobedience tactics.
Social
- Wangchuk's arrest following Ladakhi tribal demands for Sixth Schedule links the case to tribal rights, cultural preservation, and federal equity.
- The protest was not merely political; it reflects anxieties about land alienation and demographic change post-reorganisation — issues affecting Scheduled Tribes of Ladakh (Buddhists and Muslims).
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Sep 24, 2025: Violent protests in Ladakh; 4 killed, ~90 injured — linked to demands for Statehood and Sixth Schedule. [S1]
- Sep 26, 2025: Wangchuk detained under NSA Section 3(2); transferred to Jodhpur Central Jail. [S1][S3]
- Oct 2025: Wangchuk's wife Gitanjali Angmo filed habeas corpus petition in Supreme Court; SC issued notice to Centre and UT of Ladakh. [S2]
- Oct 6, 2025: SC sought Centre's and Ladakh UT's response on the petition. [S2]
- Oct 15, 2025: Hearing adjourned. [S2]
- Feb 12, 2026: SC hearing — Centre refused to release on health grounds; SC questioned causal link between Wangchuk's statements and violence; exchange on Gandhian methods vs. Centre calling Wangchuk "completely anti-India." [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- NSA, 1980 is Act No. 65 of 1980, assented to on 27 December 1980. [S4]
- NSA empowers detention under Section 3(2) by Central or State Government. [S4][S5]
- Maximum detention under NSA without court conviction: 12 months (extendable). [S4]
- The NSA originally did not extend to J&K (relevant: post-Art. 370 changes applied it to J&K). [S4]
- Sonam Wangchuk detained on 26 September 2025 — two days after the September 24 Ladakh violence. [S1]
- Place of detention: Jodhpur Central Jail, Rajasthan (not in Ladakh). [S3]
- Petition filed before SC by Gitanjali Angmo (Wangchuk's wife), not by Wangchuk himself. [S2]
- SC Bench: Justices Aravind Kumar and P.B. Varale. [S3]
- Centre's representative: Solicitor-General Tushar Mehta + ASG K.M. Nataraj. [S3]
- Sixth Schedule of the Constitution relates to administration of tribal areas — currently applies to NE states (Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram). [Background]
- Ladakh became a UT without legislature on 31 October 2019 under J&K Reorganisation Act, 2019. [Background]
- 1993 data: 72.3% of NSA detainees released later due to lack of evidence — cited in context of NSA misuse concerns. [S4]
- Fundamental rights cited by petitioner: Articles 14, 19, 21, and 22. [S2]
- Art. 22(4) requires Advisory Board review for preventive detention beyond 3 months. [Background]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping:
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Separation of powers; Judiciary; Fundamental Rights; Federalism; Civil liberties |
| GS-II | Issues relating to development and management of UTs; tribal issues |
| GS-IV | Ethical issues in governance; civil disobedience; State vs. individual rights |
Plausible Mains Questions:
-
"Preventive detention laws like the National Security Act have been consistently criticised as being disproportionate and subject to misuse. Critically examine with reference to constitutional safeguards and recent judicial trends." (GS-II)
-
"The demand for Sixth Schedule status in Ladakh reflects a deeper crisis of federal accommodation of tribal identities in reorganised Union Territories. Discuss." (GS-II)
-
"Where does the line lie between the State's obligation to maintain public order and the citizen's right to peaceful dissent? Analyse with reference to recent judicial pronouncements." (GS-IV / GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Sixth Schedule of the Constitution | Core demand behind Ladakh protests; tribal governance architecture |
| National Security Act, 1980 — full provisions | Direct legal framework of Wangchuk's detention |
| Preventive Detention laws in India (NSA, UAPA, COFEPOSA, PIT-NDPS) | Comparative legal framework; UPSC tests confusion between these Acts |
| Reorganisation of J&K, 2019 & UT governance | Root cause of Statehood demand; UT without legislature = democratic deficit |
| Habeas Corpus — Art. 32 & Art. 226 | Judicial remedy used in this case; history from ADM Jabalpur to present |
| Tribal rights and Fifth vs. Sixth Schedule | Frequently confused; Sixth Schedule = NE tribal areas with Autonomous District Councils |
| Civil Disobedience & Gandhian methods — Constitutional status | SC's reference to Gandhian mode; Art. 19(1)(a)/(b)/(c) dimensions |
| Arab Spring — geopolitical context | Centre cited it as grounds; UPSC tests international events and their analogies |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
NSA vs. UAPA confusion: NSA (1980) is a preventive detention law for public order/security — no trial needed. UAPA (1967, amended multiple times) targets unlawful activities and terror — involves criminal prosecution. Do not conflate them.
-
Sixth Schedule ≠ Fifth Schedule: Fifth Schedule = administration of Scheduled Areas in mainland India (tribal governance). Sixth Schedule = Autonomous District Councils in NE states only. Ladakh is demanding inclusion in the Sixth Schedule — it is NOT currently covered.
-
Wangchuk's wife as petitioner: Many aspirants assume Wangchuk himself filed the petition — he could not, being in detention. It was Gitanjali Angmo (wife) who filed the habeas corpus.
-
NSA geographic applicability: Originally excluded J&K; after abrogation of Art. 370 (August 2019), all central laws including NSA apply to J&K and Ladakh. Trap: pre-2019 rules no longer apply.
-
"Health grounds" vs. merits of detention: The Feb 2026 SC hearing was specifically on whether health grounds warrant interim release — not on the validity of detention itself. The substantive merits hearing is separate. Confusing these stages leads to wrong answers on procedural aspects of SC jurisdiction.
11. Sources
- [S1] Wangchuk arrested under NSA, moved out of Ladakh — Tribune India — https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/top-headlines/wangchuk-arrested-under-nsa-moved-out-of-ladakh — (Tier 4)
- [S2] SC seeks Centre, Ladakh's response on plea against Sonam Wangchuk's NSA detention — News on AIR (Govt. of India) — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/supreme-court-seeks-centre-ladakhs-response-on-plea-against-sonam-wangchuks-nsa-detention — (Tier 1)
- [S3] Cannot release Wangchuk on health grounds, Centre tells SC — The Hindu (article excerpt provided) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-12/th_international/articleGIRFITR46-13474735.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S4] National Security Act, 1980 (PDF) — Ministry of Home Affairs, GoI — https://www.mha.gov.in/sites/default/files/National_Security_Act1980.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S5] The National Security Act, 1980 — Legislative Department, Ministry of Law and Justice — https://lddashboard.legislative.gov.in/actsofparliamentfromtheyear/national-security-act-1980 — (Tier 1)