West Bengal anti-social activities Bill to be tabled on June 29
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The West Bengal government is set to table 'The West Bengal Public Safety & Control of Anti-Social Activities Bill, 2026' on the floor of the state Assembly on 29 June 2026, following the issuance of a gazette notification for the legislation. The Bill, published in a special issue of the Calcutta Gazette, aims to ensure public safety, maintain law and order, and establish strict control over organised anti-social activities in the state.
Key Provisions of the Bill
The legislation is structured around two principal mechanisms that distinguish it from existing provisions under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023. The first empowers authorities to place a person identified as a threat to public safety under preventive arrest for up to one year. The second grants the state government the power to confiscate property of individuals found involved in anti-social offences by invoking the relevant sections of the BNS.
Additionally, the proposed law would give police the authority to expel or ban a person from a specific area if there is reasonable apprehension that their presence could cause unrest. The Bill also includes provisions offering legal protection to police and government officials involved in its implementation.
Advisory Board to Oversee Preventive Detention
A key safeguard built into the Bill is the formation of an advisory board to oversee the application of preventive arrest. This board will determine whether preventive detention is warranted in individual cases and assess the reasonableness of each detention. Crucially, a detainee will be permitted to appoint a representative to defend their case before the board.
The advisory board will be headed by a sitting or former judge of the Calcutta High Court, with two additional members who are qualified to serve as High Court judges. This structure is intended to provide judicial oversight over what critics may argue is a sweeping executive power.
Legislative Background
Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari had announced plans to introduce the Bill earlier this week during deliberations in the ongoing budget session of the West Bengal Assembly. The gazette notification has already been issued ahead of the Monday, 29 June tabling, clearing the procedural path for the House to take it up for clearance.
The Bill comes amid broader national conversations about balancing public order legislation with civil liberties protections, particularly as several states have revisited preventive detention frameworks in the post-BNS legal landscape. Whether the West Bengal Assembly passes the Bill without amendments remains to be seen.