Habitual Offender Laws
- March 21, 2025
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Habitual Offender Laws
Sub : Polity
Sec : Legislation in new
Context:
- Habitual offender laws classify certain individuals as repeat criminals based on past convictions.
- The Supreme Court (SC) has questioned the constitutional validity of these laws, highlighting their misuse against denotified tribes (DNTs).
- As of March 2025, such laws continue to operate in 14 States and Union Territories (UTs).
- Some States, like Gujarat, argue for their continuation, while others, like Punjab, are in the process of repealing them.
Supreme Court’s Observations on Habitual Offender Laws
- In October 2024, while addressing caste discrimination in jails, the Supreme Court noted that habitual offender laws were “constitutionally suspect” and used to “target members of denotified tribes.”
- The Court observed that these laws replaced the Criminal Tribes Act but continued to associate members of certain communities with crime.
- It explicitly stated, “A whole community ought not to have either been declared a criminal tribe in the past or a habitual offender in the present.”
- Urged States to review the necessity of such laws.
Origin of the ‘Habitual Offender’ Classification
Colonial-Era Criminalisation of Communities
- Regulation XXII of 1793:
- Gave magistrates the power to imprison or force certain communities into labor based on suspicion.
- Indian Penal Code (1860) & Criminal Procedure Code (1861):
- Created mechanisms to maintain registers of “dacoits and thugs.”
- Criminal Tribes Act (CTA) of 1871:
- First introduced the term “criminal tribe.”
- Allowed authorities to declare a gang, a tribe, or a class of people as criminals.
- Strengthened in later years and expanded to all of colonial India in 1924, exponentially increasing the number of criminalized communities.
Post-Independence Developments
- Criminal Tribes Act Enquiry Committee Report (1949-50):
- Recommended repealing the CTA and enacting a central law for habitual offenders, irrespective of caste or birth.
- 1952:
- The CTA was repealed, and affected communities were reclassified as Denotified, Nomadic, and Semi-Nomadic Tribes (DNT, NT, SNT).
- States introduced “habitual offender” laws:
- Madras Restriction of Habitual Offenders Act, 1948 (extended to Delhi in 1951).
- Rajasthan Habitual Offenders Act, 1953.
- Similar laws were adopted by Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal, Karnataka, Goa, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, etc., over the next two decades.
- Lokur Committee Report (1965):
- Despite reforms, it still described DNTs as communities with an “anti-social heritage” and an “affinity for crime.”
Criteria for Declaring a ‘Habitual Offender’
- Habitual offender laws across States included crimes such as:
- “Being a thug.”
- “Belonging to a gang of dacoits.”
- “Living on the earnings of prostitution.”
- Multiple entries on “lurking.”
- Registers were maintained, and prison manuals incorporated rules for treating habitual offenders, often continuing to target erstwhile “criminal tribes.”
- Example: Rajasthan’s jail manual explicitly allowed DNT members to be designated as habitual offenders.
Controversy and Resistance Against Habitual Offender Laws
Budhan Sabar Case (1998) and the Rise of Activism
- 1998: Budhan Sabar, a member of a denotified community in West Bengal, died in custody, leading to national outrage.
- Denotified and Nomadic Tribes Rights Action Group (DNT-RAG) was formed by Mahasweta Devi and G.N. Devy to advocate for these communities.
- A magazine ‘Budhan’ was launched to highlight issues faced by DNTs.
Petition to NHRC and United Nations (1998-2000)
- In 1998, DNT-RAG wrote to:
- National Human Rights Commission (NHRC)
- United Nations Secretary-General
- The letter highlighted how police and society continued to treat DNTs as ‘born criminals’ and ‘habitual criminals’ despite the repeal of the CTA.
- The NHRC formed an Advisory Group in 2000, which concluded that habitual offender laws should be repealed.
International and National Reports Against the Law
- United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (2007):
- Called for the repeal of habitual offender laws due to their discriminatory use.
- B.S. Renke Commission (2008):
- Noted how these laws continued to negatively impact DNT communities.
- Virginius Xaxa Committee (2014):
- Reported that the stigma of criminality attached to DNTs persisted due to habitual offender laws.
- Sukanya Santha’s 2020 Report:
- Documented caste-based discrimination in prisons, including the treatment of habitual offenders.
- Filed a petition in SC, prompting the Court’s 2024 observations.
State-Wise Responses to Habitual Offender Laws
States Repealing or Discontinuing the Law
- Punjab: Has not implemented the law for over five years.
- Haryana: Already repealed the law.
- Odisha: No case registered under the law in the last five years.
- Andhra Pradesh: No one currently imprisoned under the law.
States Opposing Repeal
- Gujarat: Argued against repealing the law, stating that its intent is not to harass.
- Goa: Claimed that since there are no DNTs in the State, misuse is not possible.
- Telangana: Called the law “preventative.”
- Uttar Pradesh: Claimed that since all habitual offender provisions are covered under the Goondas Act, repeal is irrelevant.
NCRB Data (2022) on Habitual Offenders
- 1.9% of India’s 1.29 lakh convict population is classified as habitual offenders.
- Delhi has the highest proportion (21.5%).