Maharashtra under pressure, to tweak draft of internal security Act
The Maharashtra government has decided to
tweak the newly-drafted Maharashtra Protection of Internal Security Act
following public outcry over its contentious clauses. The changes will be made
before the draft is presented to the State Cabinet.
The government will incorporate three
changes:
- Reduction in punishment from the current three years to half.
- Increase in restrictions on public assembly to 2,500 from the proposed 100.
- Include a clause defining that the draft of the Act will not be applicable on private functions such as marriages and parties.

Background:
The Act was introduced recently with an
emphasis on ‘maintaining law and order, combating terrorism, insurgency, caste
violence, communalism, and bringing nuclear reactors, dams, major projects and
coastal areas under its ambit’.
- But, the State was forced to withdraw the draft in the face of protests over clauses allowing the police’s arbitrary power to interfere in public gatherings and carry out security checks in public places.
- The draft also defines critical infrastructure sectors and proposes setting up of special security zones where movement of arms, explosives and inflow of unaccounted funds will be prohibited.