SC to hear from May 5 over 250 petitions challenging CAA for discrimination


UPSC Study Note: SC to Hear 250+ Petitions Challenging CAA (Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1955 Citizenship Act, 1955 — parent legislation governing Indian citizenship
2003 Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2003 — introduced concept of illegal migrants ineligible for citizenship
2016 Citizenship (Amendment) Bill first introduced in Lok Sabha; lapsed with dissolution of 16th LS
11 Dec 2019 Lok Sabha passes CAA Bill (311–80); Rajya Sabha passes (125–105)
12 Dec 2019 Presidential assent; CAA enacted as Act No. 47 of 2019 [S3]
Jan 2020 Supreme Court issues notice to government; declines stay; refers to Constitution Bench
Mar 2024 CAA Rules 2024 notified by MHA; application process goes live [S4]
Mar 2024 Last SC hearing before CJI Chandrachud; Sibal argues irreversibility of citizenship grants [S1-Article]
Feb 2026 SC (CJI Surya Kant Bench) schedules final hearing May 5–12, 2025 [S1-Article]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Social / Demographic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Administrative / Federalism

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. CAA received Presidential assent on 12 December 2019 as Act No. 47 of 2019. [S3]
  2. CAA amends the Citizenship Act, 1955 — specifically inserts Section 6B. [S3]
  3. Eligible migrants must have entered India on or before 31 December 2014. [S2]
  4. CAA covers six religious communities: Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi, Christian — Islam is excluded. [S2]
  5. Source countries under CAA: Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan (all constitutionally Islamic states). [S2]
  6. Residency period for naturalization under CAA: 5 years (reduced from 11 years under general law). [S2]
  7. CAA does not apply to areas under the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution. [S1-Article]
  8. CAA does not apply to areas covered by Inner Line Permit under Bengal Eastern Frontier Regulation, 1873. [S1-Article]
  9. Implementing ministry: Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA); implementation routed via Director of Census Operations at the empowered committee level. [S4]
  10. CAA Rules 2024 were notified in March 2024 — approximately 5 years after the parent Act. [S4][S1-Article]
  11. Primary petitioner challenging CAA in SC: Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) with 237 separate petitions. [S1-Article]
  12. SC scheduled final hearing from May 5, 2026 before a bench headed by CJI Surya Kant. [S1-Article]
  13. Total petitions challenging CAA pending in SC: over 250. [S1-Article]
  14. Citizenship is a Union List subject — Entry 17, List I, Seventh Schedule; states cannot legislate on it.
  15. SC's October 2024 ruling upheld Section 6A of Citizenship Act (Assam Accord, 1985) by 4:1 majority.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Indian Constitution — Features, Amendments, Significant Provisions; Fundamental Rights; Separation of Powers; Judiciary
GS-II Effect of policies & politics on minorities; Social justice
GS-I Post-independence consolidation; Population & demographic issues; Society
GS-IV Ethical issues in governance; Discrimination; Constitutional morality

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 is constitutionally valid as it addresses religious persecution, not religious discrimination." Critically examine this argument in light of Article 14 and the Basic Structure doctrine.
  2. "The exemption of Sixth Schedule and Inner Line areas from the CAA addresses North-East India's concerns only partially." Discuss the demographic, constitutional, and administrative dimensions of this tension.
  3. "The delay between enacting the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (2019) and notifying its Rules (2024) raises questions about executive accountability and judicial oversight." Analyze.

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Register of Citizens (NRC) — Assam Directly linked to CAA; together form the "CAA-NRC" debate on citizenship and statelessness
Article 14 — Right to Equality & Reasonable Classification Core constitutional provision under which CAA is challenged
Sixth Schedule of the Constitution Tribal autonomy provisions; determines CAA's exempted zones in NE India
Citizenship Act, 1955 & Section 6A (Assam Accord) Parent legislation amended by CAA; SC upheld Section 6A in Oct 2024
Inner Line Permit (ILP) System Restricts outsider entry into protected NE states; interacts with CAA exemptions
Basic Structure Doctrine Petitioners argue CAA violates secularism (a basic structure element)
Fundamental Rights (Articles 14, 15, 21, 25) Constitutional pegs of the legal challenge to CAA
India's Neighbourhood Policy & Minorities Abroad CAA's foreign policy implications with Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. CAA ≠ NRC: CAA grants citizenship; NRC identifies illegal migrants. They are separate processes. Confusing them is a frequent prelims and interview trap.
  2. "CAA strips citizenship" — WRONG. CAA only adds a pathway to citizenship; it does not revoke anyone's existing citizenship. The NRC (if implemented nationally) could detect illegal migrants, but CAA itself does not take away citizenship.
  3. Wrong cut-off date: The entry-into-India cut-off is 31 December 2014, not 2019 (the Act's enactment year). A very common factual error.
  4. All NE states are exempt — WRONG. CAA exempts only Sixth Schedule areas and Inner Line Permit areas. Assam's Brahmaputra Valley (most of the state's population) is NOT covered by either exemption and IS subject to CAA.
  5. Citizenship is a Concurrent List subject — WRONG. Citizenship is a Union List subject (Entry 17, List I); state resolutions against CAA are politically symbolic but legally meaningless.
  6. Confusing Section 6A with Section 6B: Section 6A = Assam Accord citizenship provision (1985, upheld Oct 2024). Section 6B = the new provision inserted by CAA 2019. Do not conflate.

11. Sources