
The Bombay High Court stated that ownership of documents such as the Aadhaar card, Mr. Card or Voter ID is not enough to determine Indian citizenship. The Court emphasized that citizenship is strictly determined according to the provisions of the Citizenship Act of 1955, not through documents of identity for access or identifying services.
What was it about in Bombay HC?
The judgment came when the court rejected the bail of Abdul Ruf Sardar, claiming that the prosecution is a Bangladeshi national who entered India illegally more than ten years ago.
According to the police, Sardar allegedly lived in the Maharashtra Thane district since 2013 using counterfeit identification documents, including Aadhaar, Pan, Voter ID and even Indian passport.
The authorities claim that it has crossed the border without valid travel documents, acquired fraudulent Indian documents and used them to present as a citizen.
What did Bombay High Court say?
Justice Amit Borkar noted that the 1955 citizenship Act is the “main and control Act” for nationality decisions in India. The law determines who can be a citizen, how to obtain citizenship and under what circumstances it can be lost.
“Only with documents such as Aadhaar Card, Mr. Card or Voter ID does not do someone from India in itself,” the court ruled. “These documents relate to the identification or use of services, but do not overwhelm the legal requirements of citizenship.”
The bench emphasized the importance of distinguishing legal citizens from illegal migrants and warned that allowing counterfeit identity undermines national sovereignty and allows individuals without legal status to be unauthorized to citizens.
Why was the bail rejected Babu Abdul Ruf Sardar?
The High Court in Mumbai rejected Sardar’s bail request and quoted the continuing verification of his Aadhaara by the unique identification office of India (Uidai) and the fears that escape can escape. Justice Borkar pointed out that the accusations exceeded exceeding – involving the deliberate secrecy of identity and creating counterfeit documents to claim civil benefits.
The police also said it was investigating whether the Sardar case was associated with a wider organized network involved in illegal immigration and fraud with identity.
What is the legal context?
When the Indian Constitution was designed, the country has just undergone the section and caused extensive migration. Framers created a constitutional provision to clearly define who would be considered a citizen at the beginning of the country and provide Parliament by the Citizenship Act.
The Citizenship Act, which was approved in 1955, remains a definitive Act on this matter – and prohibits illegal migrants in obtaining citizenship through most legal routes.
Aadhaar cannot be accepted as evidence of citizenship: SC
Meanwhile, the Supreme Court approved the Election Commission (ECI) on Tuesday that Aadhaar should not be considered convincing evidence of citizenship and stated that it must be independently verified.
The bench of justice Surya Kant and the judiciary Joyylya Bagchi heard petitions about a special intensive revision (Sir) of Bihar election roles.
“EC is right that Aadhaar cannot be accepted as convincing evidence of citizenship. It must be verified,” Kant’s judiciary said the chapels of Kapil Sibal, who appeared for the petitioner, as Livelaw says.
Key
The decision of Bombay High Court serves as a clear reminder: Identity documents are not proof of nationality. For civic demands, it is a law – not paperwork – the final authority.
(Tagstotranslate) Bombay High Court





