SC agrees to list another plea against Assam Chief Minister


SC Agrees to List Another Plea Against Assam Chief Minister — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Petitioners (fresh plea) Hiren Gohain (former professor), Harekrishna Deka (former DGP, Assam), Paresh Chandra Malakar (senior journalist / NE Now Editor-in-Chief), Santanu Borthakur (senior advocate)
Petitioners (earlier pleas) CPI(M) (party petition); Annie Raja (CPI leader)
Respondent Himanta Biswa Sarma, Chief Minister, Assam (BJP)
SC Bench Headed by Chief Justice Surya Kant; Justices Joymalya Bagchi & Vipul Pancholi
Relief sought Direction to register FIR / take action against CM for alleged hate speeches targeting Muslims
Key dates of alleged speeches January 25 & 27, 2026
Video controversy BJP Assam handle video, February 7, 2026 — depicting firearm discharge at animated Muslim figures; deleted
SC's final stand (Feb 16, 2026) Declined direct hearing; directed petitioners to Gauhati High Court
Gauhati HC Issued notice to Sarma; next date April 21, 2026
Relevant Constitutional Articles Art. 19(1)(a) — freedom of speech; Art. 19(2) — reasonable restrictions; Art. 14, 15, 21; Art. 25–28 (religious freedom)
Relevant IPC/BNS sections Section 153A IPC (BNS equivalent: S.196) — promoting enmity; Section 295A IPC (BNS: S.299) — deliberate acts outraging religious feelings
Key SC precedents Amish Devgan v. UOI (2020); Tehseen Poonawalla v. UOI (2018); Pravasi Bhalai Sangathan v. UOI (2014)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Political / Governance

Social / Minority Rights

Ethical / Accountability

Administrative / Federal


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The fresh plea against Assam CM (February 2026) was filed by four persons, including former DGP Harekrishna Deka and former professor Hiren Gohain. [S1]
  2. Earlier, CPI(M) and CPI leader Annie Raja had separately filed pleas before the Supreme Court on the same issue. [S1]
  3. The SC bench hearing these pleas was headed by Chief Justice Surya Kant. [S2][S3]
  4. SC ultimately redirected petitioners to the Gauhati High Court, not the Supreme Court, for adjudication. [S3]
  5. Alleged hate speeches by CM Sarma occurred on January 25 and 27, 2026, in the context of electoral roll revision in Assam. [S2]
  6. A BJP Assam video (February 7, 2026) purportedly showing CM Sarma shooting at Muslim figures was deleted after controversy. [S2]
  7. Section 153A IPC (BNS: S.196) — "promoting enmity between groups on grounds of religion" — is the primary penal provision invoked in hate speech FIRs.
  8. SC described direct petitions bypassing the HC as a "calculated effort to demoralise High Courts." [S3]
  9. Key hate speech SC precedent: Amish Devgan v. UOI (2020) — mandated investigation by senior police officers for hate speech FIRs.
  10. The "Miya" community in Assam refers to Bengali-speaking Muslims, many descended from settlers in undivided Bengal; the term is widely considered pejorative.
  11. Gauhati HC issued notice to CM Sarma with next date fixed at April 21, 2026. [S4]
  12. The right to freedom of speech under Article 19(1)(a) can be restricted under Article 19(2) on grounds including public order and incitement to an offence — the framework at issue here.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper II — Indian Polity and Governance - Syllabus: Judiciary; Fundamental Rights; Mechanisms, laws, institutions, and Bodies constituted for protection of vulnerable sections

GS Paper IV — Ethics, Integrity and Aptitude - Syllabus: Ethical issues and dilemmas in public administration; Probity in Governance; Role of civil society

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Hate speech by public officials poses a unique threat to constitutional morality and minority rights. Critically examine the legal and institutional mechanisms available in India to address such speech, with reference to recent judicial developments." (GS-II, 250 words) 2. "The Supreme Court's reluctance to entertain direct petitions against state-level political executives, preferring High Courts as the first forum, reflects sound constitutional design. Do you agree? Analyse in the context of India's federal judiciary." (GS-II, 150 words) 3. "An elected representative's freedom of expression cannot be insulated from constitutional accountability. Discuss the ethical obligations of a Chief Minister while making public speeches, with reference to relevant provisions and court decisions." (GS-IV, 150 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Register of Citizens (NRC), Assam Core demographic context; Bengali-Muslim community's vulnerability directly linked to NRC exclusions
Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), 2019 Creates legal asymmetry for Muslims; fuels communal anxieties that form the backdrop of these speeches
Hate Speech Law in India — IPC/BNS provisions Sections 153A, 295A IPC (BNS equivalents) are directly invoked; broader legislative gap on hate speech definition
Amish Devgan v. UOI (2020) Landmark SC ruling on hate speech FIR procedure — must-read precedent for this topic
Tehseen Poonawalla v. UOI (2018) SC directions on lynching/hate speech; nodal officer mechanism
Fundamental Rights — Article 19 & 21 Constitutional framework within which all hate speech arguments operate
PIL Jurisprudence in India Process, locus standi, evolution from S.P. Gupta (1982) — relevant because all petitions here are PILs
Election Commission & Model Code of Conduct MCC prohibits appeals on communal lines; intersection with CM's speech during electoral roll revision period

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing SC's agreement to "list" with SC taking up the case for hearing — listing only means scheduling; SC ultimately refused to hear the pleas on merits and redirected to Gauhati HC.
  2. Mixing up petitioners: CPI(M) + Annie Raja (CPI) filed one set of pleas; Gohain, Deka, Malakar, Borthakur filed a separate fresh plea — these are distinct petitions, not one.
  3. Wrong court for final hearing: Aspirants may assume SC adjudicated this — it did not; Gauhati High Court is the forum that issued notice and is hearing the matter.
  4. Treating "Miya" as a neutral term — it is widely regarded as pejorative in Assam political discourse; confusing it with the Urdu honorific "Mian/Miya" used across South Asia is a factual error.
  5. Attributing hate speech legislation to a single Act — India has no standalone hate speech law; provisions are scattered across IPC S.153A, 295A, 505 (BNS equivalents: S.196, 299, 353) and the Representation of the People Act, 1951 (S.123(3A) — corrupt electoral practice by appeal to religion).

11. Sources