Protection against arrest and detention in certain cases.
22. (1) No person who is arrested
shall be detained in custody without being informed, as soon as may be, of the
grounds for such arrest nor shall he be denied the right to consult, and to be
defended by, a legal practitioner of his choice.
(2) Every person who is arrested and detained
in custody shall be produced before the nearest magistrate within a period of
twenty-four hours of such arrest excluding the time necessary for the journey
from the place of arrest to the court of the magistrate and no such person
shall be detained in custody beyond the said period without the authority of a
magistrate.
(3) Nothing in clauses (1) and (2) shall
apply—
(a)
to any person who for the time being is an enemy alien; or
(b) to any person who is arrested
or detained under any law providing for preventive detention.
*(4) No law providing for
preventive detention shall authorise the detention of a person for a longer
period than three months unless—
(a) an Advisory Board consisting of
persons who are, or have been, or are qualified to be appointed as, Judges of a
High Court has reported before the expiration of the said period of three
months that there is in its opinion sufficient cause for such detention:
Provided that nothing in this sub-clause shall authorise the detention of any
person beyond the maximum period prescribed by any law made by Parliament under
sub-clause (b) of clause (7); or
(b) such person is detained in
accordance with the provisions of any law made by Parliament under subclauses
(a) and (b) of clause (7).
(5) When any person is detained in
pursuance of an order made under any law providing for preventive detention,
the authority making the order shall, as soon as may be, communicate to such
person the grounds on which the order has been made and shall afford him the
earliest opportunity of making a representation against the order.
(6) Nothing in clause (5) shall
require the authority making any such order as is referred to in that clause to
disclose facts which such authority considers to be against the public interest
to disclose.
(7) Parliament may by law prescribe—
*(a) the circumstances under which,
and the class or classes of cases in which, a person may be detained for a
period longer than three months under any law providing for preventive
detention without obtaining the opinion of an Advisory Board in accordance with
the provisions of sub-clause (a) of clause (4);
**(b) the maximum period for which any person may in any class or
classes of cases be detained under any law providing for preventive detention;
and (c) the procedure to be followed by an Advisory Board in an inquiry under
***[sub-clause (a) of clause (4)].
*Cl. (4) shall stand substituted by the Constitution (Forty-fourth
Amendment) Act, 1978, s. 3 (date yet to be notified) as— “(4) No law providing
for preventive detention shall authorise the detention of a person for a longer
period than two months unless an Advisory Board constituted in accordance with
the recommendations of the Chief Justice of the appropriate High Court has
reported before the expiration of the said period of two months that there is
in its opinion sufficient cause for such detention:
Provided that an Advisory Board
shall consist of a Chairman and not less than two other members, and the
Chairman shall be a serving Judge of the appropriate High Court and the other
members shall be serving or retired Judges of any High Court:
Provided further that nothing in
this clause shall authorise the detention of any person beyond the maximum
period prescribed by any law made by Parliament under sub-clause (a) of clause
(7).
Explanation.—In this clause,
“appropriate High Court” means,—
(i) in the case of the detention
of a person in pursuance of an order of detention made by the Government of
India or an officer or authority subordinate to that Government, the High Court
for the Union territory of Delhi;
(ii) in the case of the detention
of a person in pursuance of an order of detention made by the Government of any
State (other than a Union territory), the High Court for that State; and
(iii) in the case of the
detention of a person in pursuance of an order of detention made by the administrator
of a Union territory or an officer or authority subordinate to such
administrator, such High Court as may be specified by or under any law made by
Parliament in this behalf”.
*Sub-clause (a) shall stand omitted by the Constitution (Forty-fourth
Amendment) Act, 1978, s. 3 (which is yet not in force, date to be notified
later on).
**Sub-clause (b) shall stand
relettered as sub-clause (a) by s. 3, ibid. (date yet to be notified).
***The words, letter and figure
in brackets shall stand substituted as “clause 4” by s. 3, ibid. (date yet to
be notified).
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