In the case of Surendra @ Sunda v. The State of Uttar Pradesh (2026), the Supreme Court of India addressed systemic delays in the premature release of prisoners and directed the implementation of an automated, paperless system to streamline the remission process.
Background and Procedural History
The appellant, convicted of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment, was released on bail following a general direction by the Allahabad High Court in the case of Ganesh vs. State of U.P.. That order directed the release of convicts whose premature release applications had been pending for more than six months.
However, a subsequent Full Bench decision in Ambrish Kumar Verma vs. State of Uttar Pradesh held that the power of remission is reserved for the “appropriate authority” and that the High Court could not issue such general directions for bail. Consequently, the Supreme Court directed the appellant and other similarly situated prisoners to surrender while investigating the causes of the administrative delays.
Administrative Failures and Pendency
The Court’s inquiry revealed a “shocking picture” of administrative apathy in Uttar Pradesh:
- Massive Backlog: As of October 31, 2024, there were 1,678 prisoners who had served more than 14 years but were still awaiting decisions on their remission.
- Irregular Releases: Out of 158 prisoners released under the now-overruled Ganesh directions, 21 had not even completed the mandatory 14-year minimum sentence required for premature release consideration.
- Processing Delays: Proposals were often stuck for months at various levels, including the District Magistrate and the Prison Headquarters.
The “E-Prisons Early Release Processing Module”
To eliminate human error and “humongous administrative delay,” the Supreme Court collaborated with the National Informatics Centre (NIC) and Amicus Curiae to develop a dedicated software module. The “Processing Module” includes several key features:
- Automatic Triggering: The remission process will now automatically commence four months before a prisoner becomes eligible.
- Transparency: Prisoners or their guardians will receive routine updates and automated alerts regarding application progress via SMS and WhatsApp.
- Paperless System: The system eliminates physical file movement, uploading all necessary documents to an online platform.
- Accountability: It enforces strict timelines for each stakeholder, using a color-coded alert system to identify delays and fixing accountability through digital signatures.
- Data Interconnectivity: The module integrates data from jails (Prisoner Identification Number), police stations (FIRs), and courts (Case Number Records).
Implementation and National Vision
The Court directed the immediate implementation of the software as a pilot project in the Central Jail, Agra, and the District Jail, Lucknow. The State Government is required to provide the necessary hardware, technical experts, and computer operators to operationalize the system.
The Supreme Court further directed its Registry to circulate this order to all States and Union Territories in India, encouraging them to develop similar automated systems in collaboration with the NIC to ensure the timely and fair consideration of prisoners’ rights to premature release.
2026 INSC 414
Surendra @ Sunda V. State of Uttar Pradesh (D.O.J. 13.04.2026)



