The Supreme Court on Monday said a foreigner should
not be allowed to leave India if required to answer a criminal charge.
A bench of Justices Abhay S Oka and Ujjal Bhyuan
said while granting bail to a foreign national, the court should issue a
direction to the state or the prosecuting agency, to immediately inform about
its order to the registration officer concerned under the Registration of
Foreigners Rules, 1992.
"When a foreigner's presence is required in
India to answer a criminal charge, permission to leave India must be refused.
Under the Order (1948 order), the civil authority can impose restrictions on
the movements of a foreigner," the bench said.
The bench said the registration officer should then
communicate the bail order to all relevant agencies, including the civil
authority.
The apex court's order came in a case where it had
decided two main issues concerning bail conditions imposed on a Nigerian
national in a drugs case in July, 2024.
The top court had held the bail conditions, which
allowed an investigating agency to continuously track the movements of an
accused, violated the right to privacy guaranteed under Article 21 of the
Constitution.
In its order passed on Monday, the bench referred to
the provisions of the Foreigners Act, 1946, and said according to clause
5(1)(b) of the Foreigners Order, 1948, no foreigner should leave India without
the leave of the civil authority having the relevant jurisdiction.
Once a foreigner was released on bail, the top court
said, they couldn't leave India without the permission of the civil authority
under clause 5 of the 1948 order.
It said if such information was furnished, it would
enable the authorities under the Act, the rules and the order, to take
appropriate legal steps.
The bench directed a copy of its order to be
forwarded to registrar generals of all the high courts, who in turn would
forward it to all the criminal courts in the respective states.
The top court was dealing with the question whether
it was necessary to implead a foreign registration officer appointed under rule
3 of the Registration of Foreigners Rules, 1992, in the bail application filed
by a foreigner within the meaning of the 1946 Act.
The bench said the authorities under the law and the
1948 order have no locus to oppose the bail application filed by a foreigner
unless the bail was sought where the allegation was of the offence punishable
under Section 14 of the Act.
Section 14 deals with penalty for contravention of
the law's provisions, etc.
"The impleadment of the civil authority or
registration officer in all bail applications filed by foreigners may result in
unnecessary delay in deciding the bail applications," it said.