31 January 1969
Supreme Court
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ABDUL KARIM AND OTHERS Vs STATE OF WEST BENGAL

Bench: RAMASWAMI,V.
Case number: Writ Petition (Civil) 327 of 1968


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PETITIONER: ABDUL KARIM AND OTHERS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF WEST BENGAL

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/01/1969

BENCH: RAMASWAMI, V. BENCH: RAMASWAMI, V. SHAH, J.C. GROVER, A.N.

CITATION:  1969 AIR 1028            1969 SCR  (3) 479  1969 SCC  (1) 433  CITATOR INFO :  APR        1970 SC  97  (7,10,12)  R          1970 SC 675  (10,17)  R          1972 SC2143  (5,6)  R          1972 SC2215  (3)  F          1973 SC 824  (4)  R          1979 SC 420  (11,14)  RF         1979 SC1501  (3)  RF         1987 SC1977  (7)  R          1988 SC2090  (11)  F          1989 SC1403  (5)  R          1989 SC1861  (16)  R          1990 SC1455  (10)  RF         1991 SC 574  (11)  RF         1991 SC1090  (5)

ACT: Preventive  Detention  Act IV of 1950 Ss. 3(2), 8, 9,  10  & 11(1)-Constitution of India, Art. 22 (5)-If State Government under  an  obligation to consider representation  of  detenu before forwarding to Advisory Board.

HEADNOTE: The  petitioners were detained by orders of detention  under s. 3 (2) of the Preventive Detention Act IV of 1950.   After the  grounds  of detention were communicated to  them,  they made  representations to the State Government against  their detention.   These  were considered by  the  Advisory  Board which  reported under section 10 of the Act that  there  was sufficient  cause for detention in each case and  the  State confirmed  the detentions. under s. II (1) of the  Act.   By petitions   under  Article  32  of  the  Constitution,   the petitioners  challenged the legality of their  detention  on the  ground  that the representations made by  them  against their  orders  of  detention  were  not  considered  by  the respondent  Government, but were merely forwarded by  it  to the Advisory Board. It  was  contended on behalf of the  State  Government  that there   was   no,   obligation  on  it   to   consider   the representations since an Advisory Board had been constituted under  Section  8 of the Act to consider the  cases  of  the

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detenus and had reported that there was sufficient cause for their  detention; and that there was no express language  in Article  22  (5)  of the Constitution  requiring  the  State Government  to consider the representations of the  detenus. An  alternative  contention was that  the  State  Government might be obliged to consider the representation of a  detenu only in a case where the detention was for a period of  less than  three months or in a case contemplated by  Article  22 (7). HELD : The orders of detention against the petitioners  were illegal and ultra vires. It  is necessarily implicit in the language of Art.  22  (5) that the State Government to whom the representation is made should properly consider the representation as expeditiously as  possible.  The constitution of an Advisory  Board  under Section  8 of the Act does not relieve the State  Government from the legal obligation to consider the representation  of the  detenus  soon  as it is received by  it,  and  to  take appropriate action thereon including revocation of the order which  it was empowered to do under section 13 of  the  Act. [486 H] It  is manifest that the right under Art. 22 (5) to  make  a representation  has  been  guaranteed  independent  of   the duration of the period of detention and irrespective of  the existence  or  non-existence  of  an  Advisory  Board.   The constitution of an Advisory Board for the purpose of report- ing whether a person should or should not be detained for  a period  of more than three months is a very different  thing from  a  right  of consideration  by  the  State  Government whether  a person should be detained even for a single  day. Even  if  a reference has to be made to the  Advisory  Board under section 9 of the Act, the appropriate, Government  is, under a legal obligation, to consider the representation  of the datenu before such a reference is made.. [488 D] 480 All the procedural requirements of Article 22 are  mandatory in character and even if one of the procedural  requirements is  not  complied  with, the order  of  detention  would  be rendered illegal. [489 A]

JUDGMENT: ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 327 of 1968. Petition  under  Art 32 of the Constitution of India  for  a writ in the nature of habeas corpus. R. K. Garg, for the petitioners. Debabrata Mukherjee, P. K. Chakravarti and G. S. Chatterjee, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Ramaswami  J. In this case the petitioners have  obtained  a rule upon the respondent, viz., the State of West Bengal, to show cause why a writ of habeas corpus should not be  issued under  Art. 32 of the Constitution directing  their  release from  detention  under orders passed under s.  3(2)  of  the Preventive   Detention   Act,  1950  (Act,   IV   of   1950) (hereinafter  called the Act).  Cause has been shown by  Mr. Debabrata  Mukherjee  and  other counsel on  behalf  of  the respondent  to  whom notice of the rule was  ordered  to  be given. At  the conclusion of the hearing of this petition  on  15th January, 1969, we directed the release of these  petitioners and  said  that the reasons would be  furnished  later.   We shall now proceed to state. those reasons. As  regards petitioner No. 2 Sk.  Abdul Karim, the order  of

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detention  was made on 17th February, 1968 by  the  District Magistrate of Hooghly and reads as follows:               "No.  230-C         Dated 17-2-1968 Whereas  I               am satisfied with respect to the person  known               as   Sk.   Abdul  Karim,  son  of   late   Sk.               Nasiruddin   of  Mathurdangi,   Police-station               Chanditala District Hooghly, that with a  view               to  preventing him from acting in  any  manner               prejudicial to the maintenance of supplies and               services  essential  to the community,  it  is               necessary.  so to do, I therefore in  exercise               of the powers conferred by section 3(2) of the               Preventive\Detention Act, 1950 make this order               directing  that the said Sk.  Abdul  Karim  be               detained.               Given under my hand and seal of office.                                              Sd/- Illegible                                                    17-2-68                               District Magistrate, Hoogly". On  the  same date the following grounds of  detention  were communicated to the detenu :                             481               "1.  You are being detained in pursuance of  a               detention order made under sub-section (2)  of               section  3  of the Preventive  Detention  Act,               1950  (Act  IV  of  1950),  on  the  following               grounds               2.That on 2-2-68, at 19.05, hours you were               arrested  while  carrying  60  kgs.  of   rice               without  authority from Dankuni Bazar  towards               Dankuni Rly.  Station with a view to  despatch               the same by train into the statutory rationing               areas of Calcutta and Howrah.               (a)That  on 9-2-68 at 14.00 hrs.  you  were               found to detrain at Dankuni Rly.  Station with               a  bag  containing  one  maund  of  rice  from               Burdwan-Howrah local train.               (b)That  on 10-2-68 at 13.55 hrs. you  with               2/3  other smugglers were found to carry  rice               20  kgs.  each,  by train  from  Dankuni  Rly.               Station towards Sealdah and you all  detrained               at   Baranagore   off   side   platform   with               unauthorised stocks of rice.               (c)That  on 11-2-68 at 08,45 hrs. you  with               other smugglers were found carrying 15 kgs. of               rice each by train towards Howrah from Dankuni               Rly.  Station.               3.You  are  hereby informed that  you  may               make a representation to the State Government,               as  early  as  possible,  on  receipt  of  the               detention  order and that such  representation               should  be addressed to the Asstt.   Secy.  to               the Govt. of West Bengal, Home Deptt.  Special               Section,  Writers’  Buildings,  Calcutta,  and               forwarded  through the Superintendent  of  the               Jail in which you are detained.               4.You are also informed that under section               10 of the Preventive Detention Act, 1950  (Act               IV of 1950), the Advisory Board shall hear you               in person and if you desire to be so heard  by               the  Advisory Board, you should intimate  such               desire  in  your representation to  the  State               Government.                 Sd/- Megible                 17--2-68

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                     District Magistrate, Hooghly-. On   21st   February,  1968,  Sk.   Abdul   Karim   made   a representation, to the State Government against the order of detention. On 22nd April, 1968, the Advisory Board made a report  under section  10  of the Act stating that  there  was  sufficient cause  for  detention of Sk.  Abdul Karim.   On  24th  July, 1968,  the Governor of West Bengal confirmed  the  detention order under section 11 (1) of the Act. 482 Section 3 of the Act provides :               "3.  (1) The Central Government or  the  State               Government may-               (a)If satisfied with respect to any  person               that with a view     to  preventing  him  from               acting in any manner prejudicial to-               (i)   the  defence of India, the relations  of               India  with foreign powers or the security  of               India, or               (ii)   the  security  of  the  State  or   the               maintenance of public order, or               (iii)the maintenance of supplies and services               essential to the community, or               (b)if satisfied with respect to any  person               who  is a foreigner within the meaning of  the               Foreigners Act, 1946 (XXXI of 1946), that with               a view to regulating his continued presence in               India  or with a view to  making  arrangements               for his expulsion from India, it is  necessary               so  to do, make an order directing  that  such               person be detained.               (4)When  any order is made or  approved  by               the  State Government under this section,  the               State  Government  shall, as soon as  may  be,               report  the  fact to  the  Central  Government               together  with the grounds on which the  order               has been made and such other particulars as in               the  opinion  of the state  Government  having               bearing on the necessity for the order". Sub-sections  (2)  and  (3)  of  this  section  empower  the District   Magistrate,  Sub-Divisional  Magistrate  or   the Commissioner of Police in a Presidency Town to exercise  the power  conferred by and make the order contemplated in  sub- section  (1),  but with the ,,qualification that  any  order made   thereunder  must  be  reported  ,forthwith   to   the Government of the State to which the officer in question  is subordinate  with  the grounds on which the order  has  been made  and  such other particulars as in his opinion  have  a bearing  on  the necessity for the order.   Sub-section  (3) further   provides  that  no  such  order  made  after   the commencement of the Preventive Detention (Second  Amendment) Act,  1952, shall remain in force for more than twelve  days after the making thereof unless in the meantime it has  been approved  by  the State Government.  Section 7  of  the  Act reads :               "7. (1) When a person is detained in pursuance               of a detention order, the authority making the               order shall,                                    493               as  soon  as may be, but not later  than  five               days  from the date of detention,  communicate               to him the grounds on which the order has been               made,  and  shall  afford  him  the   earliest               opportunity of making a representation against               the order to the appropriate Government.

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                           (2) Nothing  in  sub-section (1)               shall require the authority to disclose  facts               which  it considers to be against  the  public               interest to disclose". Section 8 provides for constitution of one or more  Advisory Boards for the purposes of this Act.  Section 9 states               "In  every  case where a detention  order  has               been  made  under this  Act,  the  appropriate               Government shall, within thirty days from  the               date  of  detention  under  the  order,  place               before  the Advisory Board constituted  by  it               under section 8 the grounds on which the order               has beep made and the representation, if  any,               made by the person affected by the order,  and               in  case where the order has been made  by  an               officer,  also  the report  by  such  officer,               under sub-section (3) of section 3".                Section 11 enacts :                " 1. (1) In any case where the Advisory Board               has  reported  that there is  in  its  opinion               sufficient  cause  for  the  detention  of   a               person, the appropriate Government may confirm               the detention order and continue the detention               of the person concerned for such period as  it               thinks fit.               (2)In any case where the Advisory Board has               reported  that  there  is in  its  opinion  no               sufficient  cause  for the  detention  of  the               person  concerned, the appropriate  Government               shall revoke the detention order and cause the               person to be released forthwith".               Section 11A states                "11A.(1)  The  maximum period for  which  any               person  may  be detained in pursuance  of  any               detention  order    which  has  been confirmed               under section 1 1 shall be twelve months  from               the date of detention.               (2)Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in               subsection (1) every detention order which has               been  confirmed under section 1 1  before  the               commencement   of  the  Preventive   Detention               (Second  Amendment) Act, 1952, shall unless  a               shorter  period  is specified  in  the  order,               continue to remain in force until the 1st  day               of  April,  1953, or until the  expiration  of               twelve months               484               from the date, of detention, whichever  period               of detention expires later.               (3)The provisions of sub-section (2)  shaft               have  effect notwithstanding anything  to  the               contrary  contained  in,  section  3  of   the               Preventive  Detention  (Amendment)  Act,  1952               (XXXIV of 1952), but nothing contained in this               section   shall  affect  the  power   of   the appro priate  Government to revoke  or  modify               the detention order at any earlier time."               Section  13  provides  for  revocation  of   a               detention order and reads as follows :-                "   13.  (1  )  Without  prejudice   to   the               provisions’  of  section  21  of  the  General               Clauses  Act,  1897 (X of  1897)  a  detention               order may at any time be revoked or modified-               (a)notwithstanding that the order has  been               made  by  an  officer mentioned  in  the  sub-

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             section  (2  )  of section  3,  by  the  State               Government   to   which   that   officer    is               subordinate or by the Central Government;  and               (b)  notwithstanding that the order  has  been               made  by a State Government or by the  Central               Government.               (2)The revocation or expiry of a  detention               order  shall  not bar the making  of  a  fresh               detention  order under section 3  against  the               same person in any case where fresh facts have               arisen after the date of revocation or  expiry               on  which  the Central Government or  a  State               Government or an officer, as the case may  be,               is  satisfied  that such an  order  should  be               made". The Preventive Detention Act (Act No. 4 of 1950) was enacted by Parliament by virtue of the power conferred on it by Art. 22-clause  (7)  of the Constitution read with entries  9  of List  1 and 3 of List III of the Seventh Schedule.   Article 22 (4), (5), (6)    and (7) provides as follows "22.               (4)No   law   providing   for    Preventive               detention  shall authorise the detention of  a               person for a longer period than three  months,               unless-               (a)an Advisory Board consisting of  persons               who are, or have been, or are qualified to  be               appointed  as  Judges  of  a  High  Court  has               reported  before  the expiration of  the  said               period  of three months that there is  in  its               opinion sufficient cause for such detention                                    485               Provided that nothing in this sub-clause shall               authorise  the detention of any person  beyond               the maximum period prescribed by any law  made               by  Parliament under sub-clause (b) of  clause               (7); or               (b)such,  person is detained in  accordance               with   the  provisions  of  a*  law  made   by               Parliament  under  subclauses (a) and  (b)  of               clause (7).               (5)When any person is detained in pursuance               of  an order made under any law providing  for               preventive detention, the authority making the               order shall, as soon as may be, communicate to               such person the grounds on which the order has               been  made and shall afford him  the  earliest               opportunity of making a representation against               the order.               (6)Nothing in clause (5) shall require  the               authority making any such order as is referred               to in that clause to disclose facts which such               authority  considers to be against the  public               interest to disclose.               (7)   Parliament may by law prescribe-               (a)   the  circumstances under which, and  the               class or classes of cases in which, a  per-son               may be detained for a period longer than three               months under any law providing for  preventive               detention without obtaining the opinion of the               Advisory   Board   in  accordance   with   the               provisions of sub-clause (a) of clause (4);               (b)the maximum period for which any person               may  in  any  class or  classes  of  cases  be               detained   under   any  law   for   preventive

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             detention; and               (c)the  procedure  to  be  followed  by  an               Advisory Board in an inquiry under  sub-clause               (a) of clause (4)". It  was argued by Mr. Garg that the representations  of  the petitioners were not considered by the respondent Government of West Bengal, but were merely forwarded by the  respondent to  the  Advisory Board without any consideration.   It  was contended  that the detention of the petitioners was bad  in law,  because  there,was  a  failure  on  the  part  of  the Government to consider the representations submitted by  the petitioners  before forwarding them to the  Advisory  Board. In  the  first counter-affidavit of the  respondent  it  was asserted   by  Mr.  Monoranjan  Dey  that  "there   was   no requirement of law which compelled the consideration by  the State Government of the detenu’s representation before being forwarded to the Advisory Board for consideration".  In  the second  counteraffidavit Mr. Monoranjan Dey said  that  "for securing an unprejudiced and impartial consideration of  the representation of the 486 petitioner by an independent Statutory Authority, the  State Government refrained at that stage from expressing its views on-the representations to the Advisory Board".  The counter- affidavits  of the respondents are some what vague  and  the allegation  of  the petitioner has  not  been  categorically denied.   Mr.  Debabrata  Mukherjee, however,  said  in  the course  of  argument  that the case may be  decided  on  the footing that the representations were not considered by  the State Government before sending them to the Advisory Board., It was contended on behalf of the respondent that there  was no obligation on the State Government to consider the repre- sentations  since  the Advisory Board had  been  constituted under  section  8  of the Act to consider the  case  of  the detenus and to report to the State Government whether  there was  sufficient  cause for their  detention.   The  question involved in this case depends upon the construction of  Art. 22(5) of the Constitution which has already been reproduced. Though the Constitution has recognised the necessity of laws as  to  preventive detention, it has also  provided  certain safeguards  to mitigate their harshness by. placing  fetters on  the legislative power conferred on this topic.   Article 22 lays down the permissible Emits of legislation empowering preventive  detention.   Article 22 prescribes  the  minimum procedure  that  must  be included  in  any  law  permitting preventive  detention  and  if  such  requirements  are  not observed  the detention infringes the fundamental  right  of the  detenu  guaranteed  under Articles 21  and  22  of  the Constitution.   The said requirements are : (1) that no  law can  provide for detention for a period of more  than  three months unless the sufficiency for the cause of the detention is investigated by an Advisory Board within the said  period of  three  months; (2) that the State law  cannot  authorise detention   beyond the  maximum  period   prescribed   by Parliament  under the powers given to it in Art.  22  clause (7); (3) that Parliament also cannot make a law  authorising detention  for  a  period beyond three  months  without  the intervention of an Advisory Board unless the law conforms to the  conditions  laid  down in clause (7) of  Art.  22;  (4) provision  has  also  been  made  to  enable  Parliament  to prescribe  the procedure to be followed by Advisory  Boards. Apart  from these enabling and disabling provisions  certain procedural  rights have been expressly safegarded by  clause (5) of Art. 22.  A person detained under a law of preventive detention  has  a  right to obtain  information  as  to  the

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grounds  of  detention  and has also the  right  to  make  a representation  protesting  against an order  of  preventive detention.  Article 22(5) does not expressly say to whom the representation is to be made and how the detaining authority is  to deal with the representation.  But,it is  necessarily implicit  in  the  language  of  Art.22(5)  that  the  State Government  to  whom  there  presentation  is  made   should properly consider the representation as expeditiously as 487 possible.   The  constitution  of an  Advisory  Board  under section  8 of the Act does not relieve the State  Government from the legal obligation to consider the representation  of the  detenu as soon as it is received by it.  On  behalf  of the  respondent  it  was  said that  there  was  no  express language  in  Art. 21(5) requiring the State  Government  to consider  the representation of the 1 detenu.  But it  is  a necessary implication of the language of Art. 22(5) that the State Government should consider the representation made  by the detenu as soon as it is made, apply its mind to it  and, if necessary, take appropriate ,action.  In our opinion, the constitutional right to make a representation guaranteed  by Art. 22(5) must be taken to include by necessary implication the  constitutional right to a proper consideration  of  the representation  by  the authority to whom it is  made.   The right  of  representation  under Art. 22(5)  is  a  valuable constitutional  right and is not a mere formality.   It  is, therefore,  not  possible  to accept  the  argument  of  the respondent  that the State Government is not under  a  legal obligation  to consider the representation of the detenu  or that the representation must be kept in cold storage in  the archives  of the Secretariat till the time or  occasion  for sending  it  to  the  Advisory Board  is  reached.   If  the viewpoint  contended for by the respondent is  correct,  the constitutional  right  under Art. 22(5)  would  be  rendered illusory.  Take for instance a case of detention of a person on account of mistaken identity.  If the order of  detention has been made against A and a different person B is arrested and detained by the police authorities because of similarity of  names or some such cause, it cannot be  reasonably  said that the State Government should wait for the report of  the Advisory  Board  before  releasing  the  wrong  person  from detention.   It is obvious that apart from the procedure  of reference  to the Advisory Board, the State  Government  has ample power under section 13 of the Act to revoke any  order of detention at any time.  If the right of representation in such a case is to be real and not illusory, there-is a legal obligation imposed upon the State Government to consider the representation  and  to  take  appropriate  action  thereon. Otherwise  the  right of representation  conferred  by  Art. 22(5)  of the Constitution would be rendered nugatory.   The argument   of  Mr.  Debabrata  Mukherjee  as   regards   the construction  of  Art.  22(5) cannot  also  be  correct  for another   reason.   Under  Art.  22  clause,  (4)   of   the Constitution,  it  is  open  to Parliament  to  make  a  law providing  for  preventive detention for a period  of  less, than  three  months without the cause  of  detention being investigated  by  an Advisory Board.  It is clear  that  the right  of representation conferred by clause (5) of Art.  22 does  not depend upon the duration of period  of  detention. Even  if the period of detention is less than three  months, the detenu has a constitutional right of representation.  It is also important to notice that under Art. 22(7) Parliament may  by law prescribe the circumstances under which and  the class 488

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or classes of cases in which a person may be detained for  a period longer ’than three months under any law providing for preventive  detention  without obtaining the opinion  of  an Advisory  Board.   It  cannot possibly  be  argued  that  if Parliament  makes  a law contemplated by Art. 22(7)  of  the Constitution,  the  detaining authority is  under  no  legal obligation to consider the representation made by the detenu under Art. 22(5). Faced  with  this  difficulty  counsel  on  behalf  of   the respondent  conceded that in a case where the  detention  is for  a  period  of  less than three  months  or  in  a  case contemplated  by  Art 22(7), the State  Government  will  be legally  obliged  to  consider  the  representation  of  the detenu.   But  it  was  suggested that in  a  case  where  a reference  has to be made to the Advisory Board it  was  not necessary   for  the  State  Government  to   consider   the representation.   We are unable to accept this  argument  as correct.   There is no such dichotomy in the scheme of  Art. 22(5) of the Constitution and there is no reason why it must be interpreted in a different manner for the two classes  of detenus.  It is manifest that the right under Art. 22(5)  to make a representation has been guaranteed independent of the duration of the period of detention and irrespective of  the existence  or  non-existence  of  an  Advisory  Board.   The constitution  of  an  Advisory  Board  for  the  purpose  of reporting whether a person should or should not be  detained for  a period of more than three months is a very  different thing from a right of consideration by the State  Government whether  a person should be detained even for a single  day. The  obligation of the detaining authority to  consider  the representation  is  different  from the  obligation  of  the Advisory  Board to consider the representation later  on  at the time of hearing the reference.  It follows,  there-fore, that  even if reference is to be made to the Advisory  Board under  section 9 of the Act, the appropriate  Government  is under legal obligation to consider the representation of the detenu before such a reference is made. In  the present case, Sk.  Abdul Karim has alleged that  his representation  was not considered by the  State  Government before  it  was  forwarded  to  the  Advisory  Board.   This allegation  is  not controverted  in  the  counter-affidavit filed on behalf of the respondent.  What is at stake in this case  is the issue of personal freedom which is one  of  the basic  principles  of  a democratic  State.   A  predominant position  and  role is given in our  Constitution  to  human personality and human freedom as the ultimate source of  all moral  and  spiritual  values.  Preventive  detention  is  a serious  invasion of personal liberty, and,  therefore,  the Constitution has provided procedural safeguards against  the improper exercise of the power of preventive detention.  All the procedural requirements of Article 22 are in our opinion mandatory in character and 489 even  if one of the procedural requirement is  not  complied with,  the  order of detention would  be  rendered  illegal. Accordingly,  the  order of detention dated  17-2-1968  made against   petitioner  No.  2,  Sk.   Abdul  Karim  and   the subsequent  order of the Governor of West Bengal dated  24th April,  1968 confirming the order of detention must be  held to be illegal and ultra vires and petitioner No. 2 Sk, Abdul Karim was entitled to be released. In the case of petitioners Nos. 5, Nirmal Chandra Jana,  No. 6  Sk.  Ibrahim and No. 8 Nur Mohd. the order  of  detention suffers’  from  the  same  legal  defect  as  the  order  of detention in the case of petitioner No. 2, Sk.  Abdul Karim.

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For  the  reasons already stated we hold that the  order  of detention and the order of confirmation under section 11  of the  Act  in the case of petitioners Nos. 5, 6 and  8  were also  illegal  and  ultra vires  and  the  petitioners  were consequently entitled to be released. R.K.P.S.                           Petition allowed. 490