September 15, 2025

General Studies Paper-2 

CONTEXT:

  • Three Bills replacing India’s criminal laws passed in Parliament with limited
  • Content retention, questionable inclusions, procedural changes, and lack of systemic vision raise concerns about the legislative process’s efficacy.

LEGISLATIVE PROCESS AND OPPOSITION CONCERNS:

  •  Three Bills replacing India’s criminal laws passed in Parliament amid the absence of over 140 members.
  • Despite scrutiny by a Parliamentary Standing Committee, the absence of robust legislative deliberations limited the discussion on crucial

CONTENT RETENTION AND MINISTERIAL CLAIMS:

  • Revised codes retain much of the language and content of original laws, challenging the claim of a purely Indian legal framework by Union Home Minister Amit Shah.
  • Concerns raised regarding the potential lack of path-breaking changes in policing, crime investigation, and trial

KEY REVISIONS IN BHARATIYA NYAYA SANHITA (BNS):

  • Removal of outdated sedition section and inclusion of mob lynching as a separate
  • Positive aspects include the exclusion of the Supreme Court-struck adultery law and the incorporation of hate crimes based on race, caste, etc.
  • Questionable inclusion of ‘terrorism’ in general penal law instead of relying on special

PROCEDURAL CHANGES AND AMBIGUITIES:

  • Introduction of provisions allowing FIR registration by any police officer regardless of the offense
  • Emphasis on the use of forensics in investigations and videography of searches and
  • Ambiguity regarding the extension of police custody beyond the 15-day limit, requiring clarification for legal

CRITICAL EVALUATION AND SYSTEMIC VISION:

  • Critique of the legislative process’s failure to adequately address inadequacies in the criminal justice system.
  • It is important to give emphasis on the need for revisions to align with a comprehensive vision for an improved legal framework.

CONCLUSION:

  • The rushed passage of criminal law bills without thorough deliberation raises apprehensions about potential flaws in India’s legal framework. This issue demands critical attention and reform for a robust
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