GK Question

polity hard mcq

In Hussainara Khatoon v. State of Bihar (1979), the Supreme Court recognized right to speedy trial as part of Article 21. Which reform was NOT a direct outcome of this and subsequent judgments?

  1. Release of thousands of undertrial prisoners detained longer than maximum sentence
  2. Expansion of legal aid through Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987
  3. Mandatory life imprisonment for all undertrials
  4. Prison reforms including humane treatment, rehabilitation programs

Answer: Mandatory life imprisonment for all undertrials

Right to speedy trial reforms: (a) Hussainara Khatoon (1979): Recognized right to speedy trial implicit in Article 21; led to release of undertrials detained longer than maximum sentence, (b) Subsequent reforms: (i) Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987: Established NALSA, State/District Legal Services for free legal aid, (ii) Prison reforms: Humane treatment, rehabilitation programs, vocational training, (iii) Procedural safeguards: Time-bound investigation, trial monitoring, case management systems, (c) P. Ramachandra Rao (2002): Clarified no fixed time limit; courts balance nature of offence, delay reasons, prejudice to parties, (d) NOT outcome: Mandatory life imprisonment for undertrials — would violate Article 21; reforms focus on procedural fairness, not punitive measures, (e) Contemporary applications: (i) E-courts: Digital case management to reduce delays, (ii) Fast Track Courts: Expedited trial for sexual offences, POCSO cases, (iii) Undertrial Review Committees: Periodic review of undertrial detention. Illustrates procedural due process: Article 21 interpreted to require fair, timely justice, not just substantive rights.

Topic Article 21 - Right to Speedy Trial and Undertrial Reforms
Exam Relevance Right to speedy trial reforms critical for UPSC Mains and Judiciary exams