Govt introduces in Parliament 3 redrafted Bills to replace existing criminal laws
The discussion on the bills will take place day Thursday and voting will take place Friday, Shah told opposition members who demanded sufficient time to study the three bills
PTI, NEW DELHI, DEC 12, 2023 : The Union
government on Tuesday introduced in
Parliament three redrafted Bills to replace the
existing criminal laws by including various
recommendations made by a Parliamentary
panel.
The Bharatiya yaya Sanhita Bill was
introduced first in the Lok Sabha on August 11
along with Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita
and the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam bills.
The three Bills seek to replace the Indian Penal
Code, 1860, the Code of Criminal Procedure Act,
1898, and the Indian Evidence Act, 1872,
respectively. In the reintroduced Bills, at least
five changes have been made, including in the
definition of terrorism. In the Bharatiya Nyaya
(second) Sanhita Bill, the definition of terrorism
now includes the word "economic security",
among other changes.
"Whoever does any act
with the intent to threaten or likely to threaten
the unity, integrity, sovereignty, security, or
economic security of India or with the intent to
strike terror or likely to strike terror in the
people or any section of the people in India or
in any foreign country...," it says.
The Bill has
brought changes in Section 73, making it
punishable to publish the proceedings of a
court which may reveal the identity of victims
of rape or that of similar offences without the
court's permission.
Section 73 now states:
"Whoever prints or publishes any matter in
relation to any proceeding before a court with
respect to an offence referred to in Section 72
without the previous permission of such court
shall be punished with imprisonment of either
description for a term which may extend to two
years and shall also be liable to fine."
The
printing or publication of the judgment of any
High Court or the Supreme Court does not
amount to an offence within the meaning of this
section, it explains. Union Home Minister Amit
Shah, in three identical signed statements
submitted to Parliament, had said the decision to
withdraw the three Bills and introduce them
afresh was taken after the parliamentary
standing committee on home affairs made
recommendations suggesting changes in the
three Bills following a series of discussions with
domain experts and various stakeholders.
He
had said in the statement for withdrawal that to
make comprehensive amendments to the Indian
Penal Code, 1860, the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita
Bill, 2023, was introduced in Lok Sabha on
August 11 to repeal and replace the IPC.
This Bill
was referred to the department-related
Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home
Affairs on August 18 for consideration.
Shah said the committee held several rounds
of discussions with the officials of the Ministry
of Home Affairs, Ministry of Law and Justice,
domain experts and various stakeholders and
submitted its reports along with its
recommendations on November 10.
"Based on
the recommendations of the committee,
amendments are proposed in the Bharatiya
Nyaya Sanhita Bill, 2023.
It is proposed to
introduce a new bill in place of the Bharatiya
Nyaya Sanhita Bill, 2023," he conveyed to the
Parliament. Two similar statements for
withdrawal were also made regarding the
Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita and the
Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam.
Soon after the
Bills were introduced in Lok Sabha on August 11,
Shah urged the Chair to send the Bills to the
standing committee for a threadbare discussion.
Subsequently, Rajya Sabha Chairman
Jagdeep Dhankhar referred the three proposed
laws to the committee, which comes under the
Rajya Sabha secretariat, and asked it to submit
its report within three months.
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