Fight against hate speech must be on behalf of all, says SC
Hate Speech & the Supreme Court: "Fight Against Hate Speech Must Be on Behalf of All"
UPSC Study Note | GS-II | Polity & Governance | March 2026
1. At a Glance
- The Supreme Court of India has consistently held that hate speech jurisprudence must be applied universally — not selectively in favour of one community against another. [S1]
- On 21 March 2026, Justice B.V. Nagarathna's Bench dismissed a petition seeking protection of the Brahmin community from hate speech, observing that the fight against hate speech must be on behalf of all communities. [S1]
- No dedicated central statute on hate speech exists in India; provisions are scattered across the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 and older laws. [S2]
- The topic directly tests GS-II (Polity, Fundamental Rights, Judiciary) and GS-IV (Ethics — hate, tolerance, fraternity).
2. Why in the News
- Triggering event (21 March 2026): Petitioner Mahalingam Balaji (in-person) filed a writ before the Supreme Court alleging "selective and inconsistent" application of hate-speech jurisprudence against the Brahmin community, even coining the term 'Brahmophobia' and urging its recognition as caste-based discrimination. [S1]
- Justice B.V. Nagarathna (heading the Bench) made notable oral observations on universal applicability of hate speech law and allowed withdrawal of the plea. [S1]
- Comes against the backdrop of the Supreme Court closing the landmark Shaheen Abdullah v. Union of India (2021–2025) hate-speech writ, signalling institutional retrenchment from acting as a permanent hate-speech monitor. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1860 | IPC enacted; Sections 153A, 153B, 295A, 298, 505 became primary hate-speech provisions |
| 1969 | National Commission for Minorities Act — indirect relevance to communal speech |
| 2017 | Tehseen Poonawalla v. Union of India — SC directed states to curb mob lynching & hate speech |
| 2021 | SC takes suo motu cognisance in Shaheen Abdullah v. UoI; asks states to register FIRs against hate-speech incidents |
| 2023 | Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 enacted, replacing IPC; retains and restructures hate-speech provisions [S2] |
| Jan 2025 | SC Bench (Justice Vikram Nath) closes Shaheen Abdullah writ; parties directed to seek remedies before High Courts or police [S3] |
| 2025 | Karnataka Hate Speech and Hate Crimes (Prevention) Bill, 2025 introduced — first state-level dedicated legislation [S2] |
| 21 Mar 2026 | SC (Justice Nagarathna) dismisses Brahmophobia petition; upholds universal principle against hate speech [S1] |
4. Core Static Facts
Relevant Legal Provisions (BNS, 2023 / IPC equivalents)
| BNS Section | IPC Equivalent | Subject |
|---|---|---|
| 196 | 153A | Promoting enmity between groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, residence, language, etc. |
| 197 | 153B | Imputations, assertions prejudicial to national integration |
| 299 | 295A | Deliberate and malicious acts outraging religious feelings |
| 302 | 298 | Uttering words to wound religious feelings |
| 353 | 505 | Statements conducing to public mischief |
- Implementing authority: No single ministry; enforcement rests with State Police under Code of Criminal Procedure → now Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023. [S2]
- Constitutional anchor: Article 19(1)(a) (freedom of speech) subject to Article 19(2) reasonable restrictions — public order, decency, morality, sovereignty, integrity.
- Article 21 (dignity), Article 14 (equality), and Article 15 (non-discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex, place of birth) form the constitutional basis for hate-speech restrictions.
- No standalone Hate Speech Act at the central level as of June 2026.
- Karnataka Bill, 2025 — first state-level standalone hate-speech legislation in India. [S2]
- Law Commission Report 267 (2017): Recommended amendments to IPC Sections 153A, 505; proposed new Section 153C to specifically punish hate speech targeting individuals. (Yet to be enacted.)
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Tension between Art. 19(1)(a) and Art. 19(2): SC has held speech is protected unless it falls within the eight grounds of restriction; hate speech must cross the threshold of incitement to imminent violence or public disorder to attract penal action. [S3]
- The Shaheen Abdullah closure (Jan 2025) signals SC's retreat from acting as a "permanent national monitoring authority" — reinforcing separation of powers; legislative gap must be filled by Parliament. [S3]
- Justice Nagarathna's 2026 observation crystallises the universality principle — hate speech law cannot be selectively deployed for majoritarian or minority protection alone. [S1]
Social
- Hate speech disproportionately targets minority communities, Dalits, women, and religious groups — reinforcing systemic discrimination.
- The Brahmophobia petition reflects a counter-narrative from dominant-caste groups — raising questions about intersectionality and the limits of hate-speech framing.
- Justice Nagarathna emphasised fraternity (Preamble value) as the ultimate antidote to hate speech: "Once everyone follows fraternity, then automatically there would be no hate speech." [S1]
Ethical / Governance
- SC's observation that "many things, if ignored, will fade away" reflects a liberal-minimalist judicial philosophy on speech regulation — contested by civil society groups who argue under-enforcement enables violence. [S1]
- Selective enforcement by police — the petitioner's core grievance — is a documented governance failure; NCRB data shows uneven registration of communal incitement FIRs across states.
- Absence of a central hate-speech law creates federal asymmetry: states like Karnataka move ahead while others remain dependent on BNS provisions. [S2]
Historical
- India's hate-speech framework was shaped by Partition violence (1947) — Section 153A IPC was tightened in 1969 after communal riots.
- The colonial-era architecture (IPC 1860) was primarily designed to protect state authority, not individual dignity — a structural limitation acknowledged by Law Commission 267 (2017).
Administrative
- Enforcement bottleneck: FIR registration for hate speech requires police discretion; states with communally polarised administrations systematically under-register cases.
- SC's Tehseen Poonawalla (2017) directions to appoint nodal officers for hate-speech monitoring remain partially implemented.
- Digital hate speech — online incitement via social media — falls under IT Act, 2000 (Section 66A struck down in Shreya Singhal, 2015) and IT (Intermediary Guidelines) Rules, 2021; significant regulatory gap persists.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 2025: SC Bench (Justice Vikram Nath & Justice Sandeep Mehta) closes Shaheen Abdullah v. UoI writ petition; holds court cannot substitute for police stations/magistrates/High Courts; parties directed to pursue statutory remedies. [S3]
- 2025: Karnataka introduces the Hate Speech and Hate Crimes (Prevention) Bill, 2025 — first state-level dedicated legislation; under legislative consideration. [S2]
- Late 2024: Benches begin articulating that not all controversial or incorrect statements qualify as hate speech — narrowing judicial definition. [S3]
- 21 March 2026: Justice B.V. Nagarathna Bench allows withdrawal of Brahmophobia petition; reaffirms universal, non-community-specific application of hate-speech law; invokes fraternity as constitutional value. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Section 196 of BNS, 2023 corresponds to Section 153A IPC — promoting enmity between groups. [S2]
- Section 197 BNS (= IPC 153B) deals with imputations prejudicial to national integration. [S2]
- Article 19(2) lists eight grounds on which reasonable restrictions on free speech can be imposed (sovereignty, security, friendly relations with foreign states, public order, decency, morality, contempt of court, defamation, incitement to offence).
- Law Commission of India's 267th Report (2017) recommended a dedicated hate-speech provision (proposed Section 153C IPC) — not yet enacted.
- 'Brahmophobia' — term coined by petitioner Mahalingam Balaji seeking treatment as caste-based discrimination; petition withdrawn after SC observations in March 2026. [S1]
- Justice B.V. Nagarathna headed the SC Bench that heard the Brahmophobia-hate-speech petition in March 2026. [S1]
- Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015): SC struck down Section 66A of the IT Act as unconstitutional — landmark free-speech ruling.
- Tehseen Poonawalla v. Union of India (2017): SC directed states to appoint nodal officers to combat mob lynching and hate speech.
- Shaheen Abdullah v. Union of India (2021–2025): SC took suo motu cognisance of hate speech; closed in January 2025 — court declined to serve as permanent monitoring body. [S3]
- Karnataka Hate Speech and Hate Crimes (Prevention) Bill, 2025 — first standalone state-level hate-speech legislation in India. [S2]
- Implementing agency for hate speech cases: State Police (no central agency); Centre's role limited to model guidelines.
- Preamble value invoked by Justice Nagarathna against hate speech: FRATERNITY — assuring dignity of the individual and unity of the nation. [S1]
- BNS, 2023 removed the colonial offence of sedition (Section 124A IPC); replaced with provisions on endangering sovereignty and unity. [S2]
- The SC has held that hate speech must cross the threshold of "clear and present danger" / incitement to imminent violence to attract Article 19(2) restrictions.
8. Mains Relevance
| Detail | |
|---|---|
| GS Paper | GS-II (primary); GS-IV (secondary) |
| Syllabus Heading | GS-II: Indian Constitution — significant provisions and basic structure; Fundamental Rights; Role of the Judiciary; Separation of Powers; Statutory, regulatory and various quasi-judicial bodies. |
| GS-IV Angle | Ethics in public life — tolerance, fraternity, non-discrimination; emotional intelligence in governance. |
Plausible Mains Question Stems
-
"The Supreme Court's reluctance to act as a permanent hate-speech monitoring authority signals an important constitutional principle. Discuss, with reference to the separation of powers and the legislative gap on hate speech in India." (GS-II, 15 marks)
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"Evaluate the adequacy of existing legal provisions under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 to combat hate speech in India. Should India enact a dedicated central hate-speech law? Examine with reference to international best practices." (GS-II, 15 marks)
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"Justice Nagarathna observed that the fight against hate speech must be 'on behalf of all, not limited to one's own community.' Analyse this statement in the context of fraternity as a constitutional value and the selective enforcement of hate-speech laws in India." (GS-II/GS-IV, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why It's Connected |
|---|---|
| Fundamental Rights (Art. 19 & 19(2)) | Core constitutional basis; hate speech sits at the 19(1)(a) vs. 19(2) tension |
| Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 | Contains all hate-speech penal provisions; replaced IPC |
| Shreya Singhal v. UoI (2015) | Landmark ruling on online speech; struck down S.66A IT Act |
| Mob Lynching & Communal Violence | Overlapping jurisprudence; Tehseen Poonawalla directions apply |
| Preamble — Fraternity & Dignity | Justice Nagarathna invoked fraternity; UPSC tests Preamble values repeatedly |
| Law Commission Reports (267th, 2017) | Recommended new Section 153C; shows legislative intent vs. inaction |
| IT (Intermediary Guidelines) Rules, 2021 | Digital hate speech regulation; complements offline law |
| Karnataka Hate Speech Bill, 2025 | First state-level legislation; tests federal-legislative dynamics |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
Confusing Section 66A (struck down) with current digital hate-speech law: Section 66A IT Act was struck down in Shreya Singhal (2015); it no longer applies. Current digital speech regulation flows from IT Rules 2021 + BNS provisions — not 66A.
-
Assuming India has a central Hate Speech Act: India has no standalone central hate-speech statute. Provisions are spread across BNS Sections 196, 197, 299, 302, 353 — aspirants often incorrectly cite a non-existent "Hate Speech Act."
-
Wrong year for BNS enforcement: BNS, 2023 was enacted in 2023 but came into force on 1 July 2024 — distinction tested in Prelims.
-
Misattributing the Shaheen Abdullah closure: Some confuse this with the SC upholding hate speech; the closure (Jan 2025) was procedural — the court declined to act as a permanent monitor, not an endorsement of hate speech.
-
Conflating sedition and hate speech: BNS removed sedition (old S.124A IPC) but retained hate-speech provisions (S.196, 197). Sedition ≠ hate speech — a frequent MCQ trap.
11. Sources
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[S1] "Fight against hate speech must be on behalf of all, says SC" — The Hindu, 21 March 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-21/th_international/articleGTEFOB6RQ-13933101.ece — (Tier 4; article excerpt — primary source for the March 2026 event)
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[S2] "The Karnataka Hate Speech and Hate Crimes (Prevention) Bill, 2025 / The Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 — Bill Track & Overview of Criminal Law Reforms" — PRS India — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-bharatiya-nyaya-sanhita-2023 | https://prsindia.org/files/bills_acts/bills_states/karnataka/2025/Bill79of2025KA.pdf — (Tier 1)
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[S3] "Hate Speech and the Supreme Court: From Constitutional Alarm to Institutional Closure" / "Hate Speech Guidelines Denied" / "Supreme Court Hate Speech Ruling — Shaheen Abdullah closure, Jan 2025" — search result snippets from cjp.org.in, drishtijudiciary.com, indiaobservers.com — (Tier 4 / reference; corroborated across multiple results)