Delhi Court Grants 10-Day Interim Bail To Sharjeel Imam In Delhi Riots Case To Attend Brother’s Wedding

A Delhi court granted 10-day interim bail to Sharjeel Imam in the Delhi riots conspiracy case to allow him to attend his brother’s wedding

Update: 2026-03-10 04:11 GMT

A Delhi court granted interim bail to student activist Sharjeel Imam in the 2020 Delhi riots conspiracy case to attend his brother’s wedding

A Delhi Court on Monday granted 10 days’ interim bail to Sharjeel Imam in a case linked to the 2020 Delhi riots to allow him to attend his brother’s wedding.

Additional Sessions Judge (ASJ) Sameer Bajpai of Karkardooma Court allowed Imam’s plea for temporary release, granting interim bail from March 20 to March 30.

Imam had approached the court seeking six weeks’ interim bail to attend the wedding scheduled later this month. The court, however, granted him relief for 10 days.

Imam is among the accused in the larger conspiracy case related to the February 2020 communal violence in northeast Delhi, which left 53 people dead and more than 700 injured.

Notably, the Supreme Court rejected Imam’s regular bail plea in January this year. At the time, the apex court also refused bail to Umar Khalid in the same conspiracy case.

In its January 5 order, a Bench of Justices Aravind Kumar and N. V. Anjaria held that delay in trial and prolonged incarceration cannot become a “trump card” for securing bail in cases registered under the stringent Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 (UAPA). The court had observed that while personal liberty is an important constitutional value, it cannot be the sole factor when allegations involve serious offences affecting public order and national security.

While rejecting the bail pleas of Khalid and Imam, the Supreme Court granted bail to five other co-accused in the case, including Gulfisha Fatima, Meeran Haider, Shifa-ur-Rehman, Mohd Saleem Khan and Shadab Ahmad.

The court had noted that Khalid and Imam stood on a different footing compared to the other accused due to what it described as the “hierarchy of culpability”.

Both have spent more than five years in jail in connection with the case.

The case stems from the violence that erupted in Northeast Delhi in 2020 during protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA). The clashes between supporters and opponents of the Act led to large-scale incidents of stone-pelting, arson, and violence, leaving 53 people dead and injuring thousands.

The Supreme Court had clarified that Imam and Khalid may renew their bail pleas after one year or once all protected witnesses in the trial are examined, whichever occurs earlier. It had further emphasised that the mere passage of time cannot automatically justify bail in cases involving offences under special statutes like the UAPA and that courts must balance constitutional protections under Article 21 with Parliament’s intent behind stricter bail conditions in national security-related laws.

The Delhi Police before the apex court had filed a detailed affidavit against Imam, accusing him of being a “key conspirator” in the 2020 Delhi riots, allegedly acting under the directions of Umar Khalid and other senior planners.

The affidavit claimed Imam was instrumental in engineering the first phase of violence between December 13 and 20, 2019, which later escalated into the February 2020 riots that left 53 people dead and hundreds injured.

The police alleged that Imam “conspired and executed” the initial unrest that began near Jamia Millia Islamia, during which 10 FIRs were registered, 101 police personnel and 41 civilians injured, and police booths, vehicles and buses burned.

According to the affidavit, electronic evidence including WhatsApp chats from the “MSJ Core Group” and multiple public speeches by Imam showed that he played a pivotal role in strategising the protests and calling for a disruptive “Chakka Jam” in the national capital.

One such chat, dated December 7, 2019, cited by the police, read: “अगले हफ्ते हमें कुछ करना होगा” (We must act next week). The police said that Imam, during a December 13 speech at Jamia, described the initial violence as merely a “spark” and urged the crowd to intensify the movement. In his speech, he reportedly said, “यह तो आज हुआ है, यह चिंगारी थी... अगर organised way में हो, और लोग आएंगे तो... हमारी ख्वाहिश है कि दिल्ली में चक्का जाम हो। (This happened today, it was a spark... If it's done in an organized way, and more people come, then... Our desire is for Delhi to be brought to a standstill)"

The affidavit had further cited Imam’s subsequent speeches at Aligarh Muslim University (January 16, 2020), Asansol (January 22, 2020), and Chakand in Bihar (January 23, 2020), which, according to police, revealed his intent to mobilise people, block highways and “cut off” regions of India. The police had reproduced excerpts from these speeches where Imam allegedly stated: “अगर हमें असम की मदद करनी है, तो हमें असम का रास्ता बंद करना होगा… फ़ौज के लिए और जितने भी सप्लाई जा रहे हैं, बंद करो। (If we want to help Assam, then we will have to close the way to Assam... For the army and whatever supplies are going, stop them)"

The affidavit had claimed that Imam’s statement; “चार हफ्ते हैं, सोच लीजिए क्या कर सकते हैं” (We have four weeks; decide what you can do), made on January 23, 2020, proved his awareness of the impending February 2020 riots, which erupted exactly four weeks later.

The Delhi Police had also linked Imam’s actions to other accused members of the Jamia Coordination Committee (JCC), including Shifa-ur-Rehman, Safoora Zargar, Meeran Haider, Asif Iqbal Tanha, and Saiful Islam, alleging that they executed the “final stage” of the conspiracy by sending Jamia students to various protest sites in northeast Delhi to trigger violence during the visit of then-US President Donald Trump.

Bench: Additional Sessions Judge (ASJ) Sameer Bajpai

Order Date: March 9, 2026

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