Concepts

Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act: Provisions

CAPF wiki2 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectPolity

Definition

The principal central anti-terror law of India, the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 (UAPA), and its key provisions for banning organisations, designating terrorists, and dealing with terror financing and "unlawful activities" that threaten the sovereignty and integrity of India.

Key points

  • The UAPA was enacted in 1967 to deal with unlawful activities and associations; it was strengthened over the years (notably in 2004, 2008 after 26/11, 2012, and 2019) to become India's standing anti-terror statute after earlier special laws (TADA and POTA) lapsed or were repealed.
  • It empowers the central government to declare an association "unlawful" and to ban an organisation as a "terrorist organisation" by listing it in a Schedule; membership of and support to such organisations is punishable.
  • The 2019 amendment allowed the government to designate individuals (not only organisations) as terrorists, attracting wide debate over civil-liberties safeguards.
  • It contains stringent provisions on bail (making bail harder than under ordinary criminal law), allows longer periods of police custody and detention without charge than the ordinary Code of Criminal Procedure, and covers terror financing and proceeds of terrorism.
  • It is the most common "scheduled offence" investigated by the National Investigation Agency, and cases under it are tried by designated courts.

Why it matters for CAPF

The UAPA is the backbone anti-terror law; its 1967 origin, the 2019 individual-designation provision, the stringent bail rules, and its link to the NIA are commonly tested in internal-security questions, with a clear human-rights debate dimension.

Common confusion

The UAPA is the standing anti-terror law that replaced the lapsed special laws TADA (which expired in 1995) and POTA (repealed in 2004). The 2019 change added designation of individuals as terrorists, over and above the existing power to ban organisations.

One-line recall

India's main anti-terror law (1967, much amended): bans organisations, designates terrorists (individuals added in 2019), with stringent bail rules and a terror-financing focus.

concept uapa, concept national investigation agency powers, concept nia, concept financial intelligence unit

Parent note

terrorism and counter terrorism

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