The move comes after the Centre set up 39 special courts across the country to take up terror cases registered by National Investigation Agency (NIA), in which most of the accused were Muslims.
"There is a genuine concern that some of the jailed Muslim youth could be innocent. So, we are considering the option of providing legal assistance to them to get a fair trial," a senior Home Ministry official told PTI.
Early this year, Minority Affairs Minister K Rahman Khan had expressed his concern to Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde over "wrong arrests" of Muslim youth in different parts of the country in terror-related cases.
Fully backing the Minority Affairs Minister's suggestion, Shinde wrote back to him saying, "You have my assurance that this will happen."
Proving legal assistance to incarcerated Muslim youth could be termed as UPA government's another step to allay the apprehensions of the minorities and also to provide fair justice, sources said.