Allahabad HC Rejects Constable’s Petition to Keep a Beard, Says Police Must Have a ‘Secular Image’

The court held that there is no recourse under Article 25 of the Constitution, which deals with freedom of religion, to allow an officer of a ‘disciplined force’ to keep a beard.

New Delhi: The Allahabad high court on August 12 dismissed a petition by an officer of the Uttar Pradesh police claiming that he had a fundamental right to maintain a beard. 

The petitioner, Mohammed Farman, filed two pleas: the first challenging an October, 2020 circular issued by the Director General of Police, UP which laid down guidelines for the wearing a proper uniform and maintaining a proper appearance for members of the force. 

The second petition challenged a suspension order issued against Farman by the Deputy Inspector General of the Ayodhya police on November 5, 2020. The suspension order came alongside a request for a departmental inquiry and pulled up Farman for maintaining a beard despite being a member of a ‘disciplined force’.

Farman, along with the second petition, challenged a charge-sheet filed by the District Superintendent of Police (Rural Area) of Ayodhya against him on July 29, 2021.

Farman’s legal counsel, advocate Amit Bose argued that the October, 2020 circular violated the petitioner’s rights under Article 25 of the constitution. This article pertains to the freedom of conscience, the freedom to profess, practice and propagate religion to all citizens. 

Bose referred to the Supreme Court judgement in the case of Bijoe Emmanuel and others vs. State of Kerala where the apex court defended the complainant’s right of refusal to sing the National Anthem due to their religious beliefs. 

The single-judge bench of Justice Rajesh Singh Chauhan that, with regards to the case in question, Article 25 does not confer an absolute right, noting that “all the rights have to be viewed in the context and letter and spirit in which they have framed under the Constitution”, Bar and Bench reported.

The court also referred to the case of Mohammed Zubair Corporal No. 781467-G vs. Union of India and others where the litigant was unable to establish any specific mandate in Islam which prohibits the cutting or shaving of facial hair, as reported by Live Law.

Notably, the court maintained that, being a disciplined force, the police force is necessitated to have a “secular image” in order to “strengthen the countenance of national integration. 

Bose had also argued that Farman’s refusal to cut his beard does not amount to misconduct and that no charge-sheet should have been filed. However, the court found that Farman’s actions – being in violation of a direction issued by higher officials – were not only wrong, but also amounted to “misdemeanour, misdeed and delinquency of the petitioner.”

The court noted that the maintenance of physical appearance is one of the foremost requirements of members of a disciplined force and directed the inquiry officer to conduct the departmental inquiry, preferable within three months.