The Anti Sacrilege Bill has been widely welcomed across Punjab, where beadbi, the desecration of religious scripture, has remained a deeply sensitive and unresolved issue for over a decade.
But finally on April 19, Punjab Governor Gulab Chand Kataria gave his assent to the Jaagat Jot Sri Guru Granth Sahib Satkar (Amendment) Bill, 2026, making it law. The bill, passed unanimously by Punjab Vidhan Sabha on April 13, 2026, mandates up to life imprisonment for acts of sacrilege against the Guru Granth Sahib, the holy scripture of the Sikh religion and other religion’s holy scriptures.
For our Sikh community in the state, this approval marks a landmark moment that successive governments had long promised
What Anti-Sacrilege Bill Says
This New Anti Sacrilege law imposes strict penalties for sacrilege against the Guru Granth Sahib, including 7 to 20 years in jail (extendable to life imprisonment) for deliberate damage, defacement, burning, tearing, or theft. And it includes life imprisonment and fines of ₹5–25 lakh for criminal conspiracy to disrupt communal harmony through sacrilege. The legislation aims to deter offenses against the holy scripture and maintain social harmony.
The law casts a wide net in defining sacrilege. It includes offenses involving spoken, written, symbolic, or electronic expressions that harm religious sentiments. All offences under this act are classified as cognisable, non-bailable, and non-compoundable. Such cases will be tried in sessions courts, with investigations overseen by senior police officers (Deputy Superintendent or Assistant Commissioner) to ensure accountability.
Notably, the offense is non-compoundable, meaning the accused and victim cannot settle privately to withdraw the case, unlike many other criminal cases in India. Once a complaint is filed under this law, the state becomes the prosecutor and the case must run its full course in court.
A Moment Punjab Had Been Waiting For
Over the past decade, Punjab reported nearly 597 cases of sacrilege, many involving Sikh scriptures, sparking widespread protests, road blockades, and community outrage over perceived government inaction. High-profile incidents around 2015, in particular, shook the state to its core and brought governments down.
The Guru Granth Sahib sacrilege cases from Bargari, Burj Jawahar Singh Wala, and other villages became flashpoints. However, their investigations were dragged on for years and some are still counting.
The current Aam Aadmi government in Punjab had repeatedly assured people and the Akal Takht that the government would not rest until a strict law was in place. And fortunately today’s development fulfills that promise, at least on paper.
Punjab’s Anti-Sacrilege Bill: A History of Failed Attempts
This is not the first time Punjab tried to address sacrilege through stronger law.
Bills were introduced in 2016 and again in 2018, but neither received presidential or governor’s assent in time to become enforceable law. For years, sacrilege was governed by Section 295 of the Indian Penal Code, which prescribed a maximum punishment of just two years. For communities grieving repeated violations of their most sacred scripture, two years felt like an insult.
The 2016 bill, introduced under the Shiromani Akali Dal-BJP government, had proposed life imprisonment but stalled when it was referred to the Union government for presidential assent.
The Congress government that followed in 2017 brought a revised version in 2018, but that too lapsed before it could clear all constitutional hurdles.
But Here’s a Larger Question for Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita…
The new law has also reopened a broader national debate. The bill’s prescribed life imprisonment for sacrilege radically exceeds the punishments set by most existing criminal laws, raising questions about proportionality but also prompts citizens to ask whether Indian law is tough enough elsewhere.
For example, Causing death by rash driving under Section 304A of the BNS attracts a maximum of just two years in prison. Adulterating food or drugs under the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act can result in a fine as low as Rs 500 in some provisions. Sexual harassment in the workplace, in many cases, leads to penalties that victims and activists have called grossly inadequate relative to the harm caused. Environmental violations that poison rivers and farmland often result in fines that large corporations can absorb without consequence.
Cyber fraud, which has devastated thousands of poor and middle class families, still sees many accused walk away with bail and minimal sentencing due to outdated provisions. Child labour violations under the Child Labour Prohibition and Regulation Act historically carried fines of as little as Rs 10,000 — a sum that many factory owners paid without a second thought.
The pattern is consistent: when crimes hurt a lot of people, India’s old laws often fail to provide punishments that are actually tough enough. The gap between the severity of a crime and its legal punishment is a genuine concern across India’s statute books.
But if Punjab’s push for stricter laws on sacrilege forces a bigger debate about updating all criminal penalties, then it might actually help modernize Indian law in a way no one saw coming.
Anti-Sacrilege Bill is now a LAW: What’s Next?
With the Governor’s assent, the state government is expected to notify the rules for implementation shortly. A 2025 legal analysis published by SCC Online had already flagged questions around Section 295AA and whether such provisions could withstand scrutiny under Articles 19 and 25 of the Constitution.
Top legal experts are raising a red flag: the law is so broad that it includes electronic medium too (like social media posts). This means anything from a joke to a serious academic paper could be treated as a crime if someone feels it “hurts religious sentiments.” Ultimately, the power lies with the judges; how they choose to draw the line between a crime and free speech will decide what this law actually does to everyday citizens.
For now, however, Punjab has a law it fought years to achieve. Whether it delivers justice and deters future acts of beadbi against the Guru Granth Sahib remains to be seen.
What is certain is that for the people of Punjab, April 19, 2026 will be remembered as the day the state finally said, in the clearest legal terms possible, that sacrilege will not be tolerated.





