IN THE HIGH COURT OF SINDH,
BENCH AT SUKKUR
Present;
Mr. Justice Amjad Ali Sahito
Cr. Bail Appln. No. S – 306 of 2021
Applicant : Atta
Muhammad S/o Haji
Jaffar Soomro
Mr. Nisar Ahmed Rind, Advocate
Respondent : The
State
Through Mr. Shafi Muhammad Mahar, DPG for the
State
Dated of
hearing: 23.08.2021
Date of order : 23.08.2021
O R D E
R
AMJAD ALI SAHITO, J – Through
this bail application, the applicant/accused seeks pre-arrest bail in Crime No.41
of 2020 registered at Police Station Lakha Road,
District Naushahro Feroze for
an offence punishable under Sections 302, 148, 149 PPC. The bail plea of the
applicant/accused has been declined by learned Additional Sessions Judge, Kandiaro vide order dated 04.05.2021.
2. The details and particulars
of the FIR are already available in the bail application and FIR, therefore
same could be gathered from the copy of FIR attached with such application,
hence need not to reproduce the same hereunder.
3. It is contended by
learned counsel that the applicant/accused is innocent and has falsely been
implicated in this case by the complainant with malafide
intention and ulterior motives; that the co-accused Arbab
Ali and Taj Muhammad have been granted pre-arrest
bail by this Court vide order dated 30.11.2020, whereas, the co-accused Noor
Muhammad alias Nooro has also been granted
post-arrest bail by the trial Court vide order dated 04.12.2020, therefore, the
case of present applicant/accused is identical to that of co-accused, hence he
prayed that on the rule of consistency the applicant/accused is also entitled to
the grant of bail.
4. On the other hand, learned
DPG for the State prayed for dismissal of instant bail application by
contending that the name of the applicant/accused is specifically mentioned in
the FIR with the role that he along with co-accused caused lathi
blows to deceased Rajib Ali, who succumbed to the
injures; that the offence with which the applicant/accused has been charged
entails capital punishment, therefore, he cannot be absolved from the
commission of the offence.
5. I have heard the learned
counsel for the applicant/accused, learned DPG for the State and perused the
record. Admittedly, the name of the applicant/accused is transpiring in the FIR
with the specific role that he caused lathi blows to
the deceased Rajib Ali, resultantly, who died due to
injuries. The version as set-out in the FIR is fully supported by the witnesses
in their 161 Cr.P.C statements. The ocular evidence
finds support from the medical evidence. The applicant/accused has actively
participated in the commission of the offence,
therefore, he cannot be absolved at this preliminary stage. The offence with
which the applicant/accused is charged entails capital punishment. Prima facie
sufficient material is available on record to connect the applicant/accused
with commission of the alleged offence.
6. The
concession of pre-arrest bail cannot be allowed to an accused person unless the
Court feels satisfied with the seriousness of the accused person’s assertion
regarding his intended arrest being actuated by mala fide on the part of the complainant party or the local police
but not a word about this crucial aspect of the matter is found as no mala fide is made on the part of the
complainant to believe that the applicant/accused has been implicated in this
case falsely. In this context, the reliance is placed to the case of ‘Rana Abdul Khaliq v. The STATE and others’ [2019 SCMR 1129]. Further, in
addition to the above, I would like to mention that grant of pre-arrest bail is
an extraordinary remedy in criminal jurisdiction; it is a diversion of the
usual course of law, arrest in cognizable cases; protection to the innocent
being hounded on trump up charges through abuse of process of law, therefore,
an applicant seeking judicial protection is required to reasonably demonstrate
that intended arrest is calculated to humiliate him with taints of mala fide, it is not a substitute for
post‑arrest bail in every run of the mill criminal case as it seriously
hampers the course of the investigation.
7. In
view of the above, the applicant/accused has failed to bring his case for
further inquiry as envisaged under subsection (2) of Section 497, Cr.P.C. Consequently, the interim pre-arrest bail granted
by this Court to the applicant/accused vide order dated 28.05.2021 is hereby
recalled and the bail application is dismissed.
8. Needless
to mention here that the observations made hereinabove are tentative in nature
and would not influence the learned trial Court while deciding the case of the
applicant on merits.
Judge
ARBROHI