Delhi High Court refuses to allow house arrest for PFI leader E Abubacker

The court said that he will be provided with medical treatment while hearing his plea against a local court order.

ByPTI

Published Dec 19, 2022 | 2:43 PMUpdatedDec 19, 2022 | 2:43 PM

Popular Front of India leader E Abubacker. (Creative Commons)

The Delhi High Court on Monday, 19 December, refused to keep the jailed former chairman of the now-banned Popular Front of India (PFI) E Abubacker. The court said that he will be provided with medical treatment while hearing his plea against a local court order.

“When you are asking for medical bail, why should we send you to your house? We will send you to a hospital,” remarked a bench headed by Justices Siddharth Mridul and Talwant Singh.

Last month, Abubacker’s counsel had said that the 70-year-old had cancer and Parkinson’s disease and was in “great pain”, which needed urgent medical supervision.

Abubacker was arrested by the agency during a massive crackdown on the banned organisation earlier this year and is currently in judicial custody.

The bench on Monday remarked that there was no provision in law for a “house arrest” and directed that Abubacker be “escorted safely” to AIIMS in custody for an oncosurgery review on 22 December and also permitted his son to remain present at the time of consultation.

“We are not granting you house arrest. There is no provision in law for house arrest. The honourable Supreme Court has powers which this court does not,” the court said.

Also read: Court seeks NIA stand on medical treatment of PFI Leader

‘House arrest cannot be granted’

“We don’t see anything appropriate in this because no surgery has been recommended. We can’t grant you house arrest, first of all. If your medical condition requires hospitalisation, we can direct hospitalisation. We may permit an attendant. We are not permitting anything else,” added the court.

“He is entitled to medical treatment and that we will provide,” the court said.

The court listed the case for further consideration in January next year and directed the jail medical superintendent to file a report on the consultation with the oncosurgery department of AIIMS.

Lawyer Adit Pujari, appearing for Abubacker, argued that he needed constant monitoring and treatment and even if he is sent to house arrest, there would be no “qualitative difference” for the investigating agency.

‘Providing best treatment’

Special public prosecutor Akshai Malik, appearing for NIA, stated that the accused was being provided with the “best possible treatment” and he was due to meet an oncologist on 22 December.

Last week, he had said that Abubacker was “absolutely fine” and receiving treatment.

Last month, the court asserted that requisite medical treatment will be provided to the accused while rejecting the submission that he should be sent to house arrest.

“We are not inclined to do that. AIIMS is a premier hospital in the country. If you are using this as a pretext for house arrest, we are not granting that. We are only concerned with his medical condition,” the court had said.

The court also said that it “was going to hear the appeal for medical treatment” and the accused could approach the trial court for seeking regular bail.

NIA not against treatment

The NIA had said that the agency was not opposing medical treatment to the accused and that the investigation in the case was ongoing.

A large number of alleged PFI activists were detained or arrested in several states during the massive raids preceding the nationwide ban imposed on September 28. In near-simultaneous raids across the country as part of a multi-agency operation spearheaded by the NIA, a large number of PFI activists were detained or arrested in 11 states for allegedly supporting terror activities in the country.

The arrests were made in states and Union Territories, including Kerala, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Puducherry, Delhi and Rajasthan.

The government banned the PFI and several of its associate organisations on September 28 for five years under the stringent anti-terror law UAPA, accusing them of having “links” with global terror groups like IS.

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