Authored By: Anurag Gupta
Vinoba Bhave University
For over 160 years, the Indian criminal justice system was governed by statutes rooted in British colonial rule. The year 2024 marked a historic shift with the implementation of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), and the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA). Replacing the IPC (1860), CrPC (1973), and the Evidence Act (1872), these laws seek to transition India from a “punishment-centric” colonial model to a “justice-centric” modern framework.
- The Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS): Substantive Overhaul
The BNS serves as the new substantive criminal code. While it retains the core essence of the original Indian Penal Code, it introduces several critical modernizations:
Removal of Sedition: In a landmark move, Section 124A (Sedition) has been repealed. It is replaced by provisions targeting acts that endanger the sovereignty, unity, and integrity of India, aiming to prevent the misuse of law against legitimate dissent while maintaining national security.
Definition of Terrorism: For the first time, terrorism is explicitly defined within the general penal code, rather than being restricted to special statutes like UAPA. This allows for a more standardized prosecution of organized crime and terror-related activities.
New Offenses and Penalties: Mob Lynching: The BNS specifically penalizes murder committed by a group of five or more on grounds of race, caste, or community.
Community Service: For minor offenses (like small-scale theft or public misconduct), the law introduces “community service” as a legitimate form of punishment, moving toward a reformative justice model.
Deceitful Sexual Intercourse: Section 69 criminalizes sexual intercourse achieved through false promises of marriage or deceitful means.
- The Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS): Procedural Speed
The BNSS replaces the Code of Criminal Procedure, focusing heavily on technology and time-bound delivery of justice to address the massive backlog in Indian courts.
Features change under BNSS
∙ Zero FIR Citizens can now file an FIR at any police station, regardless of where the crime took place.
∙ Electronic FIR Complaints can be submitted via electronic communication, with the signature to be provided within three days.
∙ Forensic Mandate Forensic investigation is now mandatory for all crimes punishable by seven years or more.
∙ Timelines Judgments must be delivered within 30–45 days of the conclusion of arguments to prevent indefinite delays.
- The Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA): Evidence in a Digital World
The Evidence Act of 1872 was drafted before the invention of the telephone, let alone the internet. The BSA addresses this gap by:
Primary Status for Digital Records: Electronic or digital records (emails, server logs, smartphone data) are now treated as primary evidence, provided they are stored in a recognized manner.
Oral Evidence via Video: The law formalizes the recording of testimonies from witnesses, victims, and even the accused through video conferencing, reducing the need for physical presence in every hearing.
- Implementation Challenges and Critiques
Despite the intent of “decolonization,” the new laws have faced scrutiny. Legal experts point to the Protection Gap—the removal of Section 377 (which criminalized “unnatural offenses”) without replacing it with a provision for non-consensual acts against men or transgender individuals has left a potential legal vacuum.
Furthermore, the Infrastructural Gap remains a hurdle. Mandatory forensics and digital evidence require high-speed internet, sophisticated labs, and trained personnel in every district—resources that are currently unevenly distributed across the country.
Conclusion
The transition to BNS, BNSS, and BSA represents more than just a change in nomenclature; it is an attempt to align Indian law with 21st-century technological and social realities. While the shift toward victim rights and efficiency is commendable, the success of these laws will depend on the sensitivity of the police force and the readiness of the judiciary to adapt to a digital-first legal environment.





