The right to sleep is a basic human requirement, which c🦩annot be violated, the Bombay High Court said on Monday deprecating the Enforcement Directorate (ED) for questioning a senior citizen throughout the nig꧑ht in a money laundering case.
A division bench of Justices Revati Mohite-Dere and Manjusha Deshp♓ande said statements must be recorded during earthly hours and not at night when a person's cognitive skills may be impaired.
The court gave the order in a plea filed by 64-year-old Ram Issrani challenging his arrest by the probe agency in a ♕money laundering case.
The ED arrested Issrani in August 2023.
In his plea, Issrani claimed that his arrest was ill꧙egal and unwarranted as he had been cooperating with the p🐽robe and had appeared before the agency whenever he was issued summons.
On August 7, 2023, Issrani appeared before the agency as per the summo🍸ns issued, and he was questioned throughout the night and arrested in the case the next day, the plea stated.
The bench dismissed the petition but said it 💃disapproved of the practice of questioning the petitioner through the night.
Theღ probe agency's counsel, Hiten Venegaonkar, submitted to the court that Issrani had consented to his statement being recorded through the night.
As per the plea, Issrani wa⭕s questioned till🍨 3 am by ED officials.
"Voluntary or otherwise, we deprecate the manner in which the petitioner's statement w🎀as recorded so late i🍒n the night, which went on post midnight till 3.30 am," the court said.
"The 'right to sleep' / 'right to blink' is ♉a basic🍌 human requirement, inasmuch as, non-providing of the same, violates a person's human rights," it observed.
Lack of sleep af🏅fects a person's health and may impair his mental faculties, cognitive skills and so on, it said.
"The said person, so sum✃moned, cannot be deprived of his basic human right i.e. right to sleep, by the agency, beyond a reasonable time. Statements must necessarily be recorded during earthly hours and not in the night when the person's cognitive skills may be impaired," the bench said.
The court noted that when a person is summoned for questioning, the investigating agency was yet to arrive at a "reason✃ to believe" that the said person is guilty ღof an offence.
The bench noted that the petitioner had ap❀peared bef꧙ore the agency to record his statement in the past.
The petitioner could have been summoned on some other day or even the next day instead of keeping him waiting afꦉter midnight, despite his alleged consent, it said.
"Consent is immaterial. Recording of statement, at unearthly hours, definitely results in the deprivation of a person's sleep, a basic human right of an individual. We disapproveও of🧸 this practice," the court said.
The court said it deems it appropriate to direct the ED to issue a circular/directions about the 🎐timings to record statements when summons are issued.
The bench posted the matꦓter for compliance on September 9.