Parliament recently passed three pivotal Bills: Bharatiya Nyaya (Second) Sanhita, 2023; Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha (Second) Sanhita, 2023; and Bharatiya Sakshya (Second) Bill, 2023. However, their passage became a moot point due to the absence of 97 opposition members due to their suspension.Following their introduction in August, 2023, the bills were referred to a 31-member Parliamentary Standing Committee.
What are the Major Provisions of Bharatiya Nyaya (Second) Sanhita, 2023?
The Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (Second) (BNS2) replaces the Indian Penal Code, 1860 and introduces significant alterations including:
- Retention and Incorporation of Offences: The BNS2 maintains existing IPC provisions on murder, assault, and causing hurt, while incorporating new offenses like organized crime, terrorism, and group-related grievous hurt or murder. It also adds community service as a form of punishment.
- Terrorism: Defined as acts threatening the nation’s integrity or causing terror among the populace. Penalties range from death or life imprisonment to imprisonment with fines.
- Organized Crime: Includes offenses like kidnapping, extortion, financial scams, cybercrime, and more. Punishments vary from life imprisonment to death, with fines for those committing or attempting organized crime.
- Mob Lynching: BNS2 identifies murder or severe injury by five or more individuals on specific grounds (race, caste, etc.) as a punishable offence, carrying life imprisonment or death penalty.
- Sexual Offences Against Women: Retaining IPC sections on rape, voyeurism, and other violations, BNS2 raises the age threshold for gangrape victims from 16 to 18 years. Additionally, it criminalizes deceptive sexual acts or false promises.
- Sedition Revisions: BNS2 eliminates the sedition offense, replacing it with penalizing activities related to secession, armed rebellion, or actions endangering national sovereignty or unity through various means.
- However, critics argue that despite the sedition law’s alteration from ‘rajdroh’ to ‘deshdroh,’ concerns remain over its essence and application.
- Death by Negligence: The BNSS elevates the punishment for causing death by negligence from two to five years under Section 304A of the IPC.However, it stipulates that doctors, if convicted, will still face the lower punishment of two years imprisonment.
- Supreme Court Compliance: Aligns with certain Supreme Court decisions by excluding adultery as an offense and introducing life imprisonment alongside the death penalty for murder or attempted murder by a life convict.
Major Provisions of Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha (Second) Sanhita, 2023
The Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha (Second) Sanhita, 2023 (BNSS2) replaces the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 (CrPC) and introduces significant alterations including
- Detention Conditions: The BNSS2 alters rules for undertrials, restricting release on personal bond for those accused in severe offenses, including life imprisonment cases and individuals facing multiple charges.
- Medical Examination: It broadens the scope of medical examinations, allowing any police officer (not just a sub-inspector) to request one, making the process more accessible.
- Forensic Investigation: Mandates forensic investigation for crimes punishable by at least seven years’ imprisonment.It requires forensic experts to collect evidence at crime scenes, recording the process electronically. States lacking forensic facilities should utilize those in other states.
- Sample Collection: Extends the power to collect finger impressions and voice samples, even from individuals not under arrest, expanding beyond the CrPC’s specimen signatures or handwriting orders.
- Timelines: The BNSS2 introduces strict timelines: medical reports for rape victims within 7 days, judgments within 30 days (extendable to 45), victim progress updates within 90 days, and charge framing within 60 days from the first hearing.
- Court Hierarchy: The CrPC organizes India’s criminal courts hierarchically, from Magistrate’s Courts to the Supreme Court. It previously allowed cities with over a million people to have Metropolitan Magistrates, but the BNSS2 eliminates this distinction and the role of Metropolitan Magistrates.
Major Provisions of Bharatiya Sakshya (Second) Bill, 2023
- The Bharatiya Sakshya (Second) Bill, 2023 (BSB2) replaces the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (IEA). It retains most provisions of the IEA including those on confessions, relevancy of facts, and burden of proof.
However, it introduces significant alterations including:
- Documentary Evidence: The BSB2 broadens the definition of documents to include electronic records alongside traditional writings, maps, and caricatures.
- Primary and Secondary Evidence: Primary evidence retains its status, encompassing original documents, electronic records, and video recordings.Oral and written admissions, along with testimony from a qualified individual examining the documents, are now considered secondary evidence.
- Oral Evidence: The BSB2 permits electronic provision of oral evidence, enabling witnesses, accused individuals, and victims to testify through electronic means.
- Admissibility of Electronic Records: Electronic or digital records are granted equivalent legal status as paper records.This includes information stored in semiconductor memory, smartphones, laptops, emails, server logs, locational evidence, and voicemails.
- Amended Explanation to Joint Trials: Joint trials encompass cases where one accused is absent or has not responded to an arrest warrant, now categorized as joint trials.