The concept of bail is not unfair
The concept of bail is unfair as well as
fair. In this article, I am discussing the concept of bail in context of Indian
law. The granting of bail is usually considered to be an inherent right.
However, there are certain circumstances where bail may be refused. In bailable
offences, it is a right of the accused to be released on bail. But in non
bailable offences, the accused can be refused bail by the competent authority
if the authority deems it fit. Unless exceptional circumstances are brought to
the notice of the Court which may defeat proper investigation and a fair trial,
the Court will not decline to grant bail to a person.
A court is
bound to presume a person innocent till the trial is complete. A bail hearing
is not a hearing on the merits of the matter itself and does not go into the
issue of guilt. Therefore granting of bail is the norm except in cases where
specific grounds are made out based on which the bail can be refused. If there
are reasonable grounds for believing that he has been guilty of an offence
punishable with death or imprisonment for life then the person shall not be
granted bail. Moreover if the offence is a cognizable offence and the accused
had been previously convicted of an offence punishable with death, imprisonment
for life or imprisonment for seven years or more, or he had been previously
convicted on two or more occasions of a non-bailable and cognizable offence
then the person will not be realized on bail.
In non
bailable offences, it is not the right but the discretion of the Court to grant
or refuse the bail. The effect of the above provisions is that for minor
offences the offender is given a right to bail. Whereas for serious and grave
offences the offender is not given a right to bail. In such cases, it is the
discretion of the court to grant the bail or not.
Our legal
system is based on the maxim"It is better that ten guilty persons escape
than that one innocent suffer". Hence till a accused is
under trial, he/she may be innocent, thus right to bail protects their freedom.
The object detention of an accused person is primarily to secure her/his
appearance at the time of trial and is available to receive sentence, in case found
guilty. If his/her presence at the trial could be reasonably ensured other than
by his arrest or detention, it would be unjust and unfair to deprive the
accused of his liberty during pendency of criminal proceedings.
It is
important to note the relevant provisions enshrined in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, Article 9 is that no one shall be subjected to
arbitrary arrest, detention or exile. Article 10 states that everyone is
entitled in full equality to a fair and public hearing by an independent and
impartial tribunal, in the determination of his rights and obligations and of
any criminal charge against him. Article 11(1) states that everyone charged
with a penal offence has the right to be presumed innocent until proved guilty
according to law in a public trial at which he has had all the guarantees
necessary for his defence. There are thus several reasons which have been
enumerated as to why bail ought to be allowed to prevent pre-trial detention.
In such cases the concept of bail is fair.
The right
of police to oppose bail, the absence of legal aid for the poor and the right
to speedy reduce to vanishing point the classification of offences into
bailable and non-bailable and make the prolonged incarceration of the poor
inevitable during the pendency of investigation by the police and trial by a
court. The Supreme Court in Hussainara Khatoon v. State of Bihar. Justice
Bhagwati found that the unfortunate under trials languished in prisons not
because they were guilty but because they were too poor to afford a bail.
But in
many cases granting of the bail is taking the risk of allowing an individual
who has been accused of a crime to return on the date provided by the judge.
Many a times, the accused tamper the evidences, causes undue influence on
witnesses. The accused flee from the country immediately after the bail
hearing. In these cases, it is a waste of the government's resources and time
to seek out these runaways and bring them back to the country. The cost of
searching and the amount of effort to capture the accused is very high. In
these cases the concept of bail seems unfair.
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