Supreme Court questions Abu Salem over 25-year jail claim
Supreme Court questioned gangster Abu Salem on his claim of completing a 25-year jail term, asking how he calculated it since his arrest in November 2005. Salem’s plea follows a 2022 ruling and includes remission for good behaviour
Published Date - 12 January 2026, 08:04 PM
New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Monday questioned gangster Abu Salem over his claim of having completed a 25-year jail term in India, and asked how he was calculating the period since his arrest in November 2005.
Salem, a convict in the 1993 Mumbai serial blasts, was extradited from Portugal on November 11, 2005, after a long legal battle.
Salem has said his sentence could not exceed 25 years as per the assurance given by India to Portugal for his extradition.
“First of all, how do you calculate 25 years from 2005?” a bench of Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta asked Salem’s counsel.
The apex court was hearing Salem’s plea against a July last year order of the Bombay High Court which said prima facie it appeared that the period of 25 years was yet to be completed.
During the hearing, Salem’s counsel said that as per his calculation, Salem has completed 25-year jail term.
“You were taken into actual custody on which date?” the bench asked.
The counsel said Salem was taken into custody on November 11, 2005.
“So you calculate 25 years including remission?” the bench asked.
“Your conviction is also under TADA (Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act). Let us see the prison rules of Maharashtra. Whether in a case where the accused is convicted under TADA, he would get a single day remission or not?” it said.
Salem’s counsel said he would place the relevant prison rules on record.
“Let the relevant prison rules be filed within two weeks by the petitioner,” the bench said, and posted the matter for hearing on February 9.
Salem had filed a petition in the high court seeking release, claiming he had already undergone 25-year imprisonment if remission for good behaviour was included.
The high court admitted his petition but refused any interim relief.
In its July 2022 verdict on Salem’s separate plea, the apex court had said the Centre was “bound” to honour its commitment given to Portugal and release Salem on completion of his 25-year sentence in the 1993 Mumbai blasts case.
The assurance to Portugal said Salem would not be handed the death penalty or imprisonment beyond 25 years.
In February 2015, a special TADA court had awarded life imprisonment to Salem in another case for murdering Mumbai-based builder Pradeep Jain in 1995.