Difference Between Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (IEA) Vs Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 (BSA)

Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (IEA) Vs Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 (BSA)


Differences Between IEA & BSA

Aspect Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (IEA) Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 (BSA)
Total Sections 167 Sections 170 Sections
Focus Evidence rules for 19th–20th century Evidence rules updated for 21st century (digital & electronic age)
Electronic Evidence Recognised only after 2000 IT Act amendments; limited clarity Explicitly recognised throughout; “electronic records” equated with “documents”
Secondary Evidence Narrow definition Expanded → includes copies of documents, images, digital records, server/cloud data
Admissibility of Electronic Records Section 65B certificate mandatory Section 61 (BSA) simplifies process, certificate still needed but procedures clarified
Expert Evidence Traditional experts (doctors, handwriting experts, etc.) Broader → includes digital & forensic experts
Relevancy Rules Focused on oral & documentary evidence Broadened to cover SMS, emails, WhatsApp chats, metadata, digital forensics
Presumption of Documents Limited (official records, newspapers, etc.) Wider presumptions → electronic gazettes, blockchain-like secure records
Language & Style Old colonial English Simplified, modern drafting, easier for Indian judiciary & public
Gender Neutrality Not gender neutral in all provisions Uses gender-neutral terms
Objective Prove facts in court Prove facts in court + address cybercrime, digital transactions, new-age frauds

Restructured and Renumbered

BSA Section IEA Section Comments
1 1 No change in title; BSA removes “extends to whole of India” clause (legallyin.com, The Legal Lock).
2 (definitions) 3 & 4 (definitions) Sections merged and reorganized; includes expanded definitions. (Legal Auctor, SNS Legal Aid)
3–21 5–23 Shifted by –2. (Legal Auctor)
22 24 + provisos from 28 & 29 Confession-related provisions consolidated here. (Legal Auctor, jyotijudiciary.com)
23 25, 26, 27 Confessions to police, in custody, discovery rules merged. (Legal Auctor, jyotijudiciary.com)
24–38 30–44 Shift by –6 in numbering. (Legal Auctor)
39–47 45–53 Expert opinion sections combined. (Legal Auctor, LegalOnus)
48 53A Direct mapping. (Legal Auctor)
49–60 54–65 Shift by –5 due to new sections. (Legal Auctor)
61 Brand-new provision—no IEA counterpart. (Legal Auctor)
62–63 65A, 65B Digital evidence and authentication clarity. (Legal Auctor, legallyin.com, LegalOnus)
64–65 66–67 Shift by –2. (Legal Auctor)
66 67A Shift by –1. (Legal Auctor)
67–84 68–85 Shift by –1. (Legal Auctor)
85–87 85A–85C New numbering due to added sections. (Legal Auctor)
88–92 86–90 Shift by +2. (Legal Auctor)
93 90A Shift applied. (Legal Auctor)
94–114 91–111 Shift by +3. (Legal Auctor)
115 111A Direct mapping. (Legal Auctor)
116–119 112–114 Shift by +4. (Legal Auctor)
120 114A New numbering. (Legal Auctor)
121–131 115–125 Shift by +6. (Legal Auctor)
132 116–117 Split sections. (Legal Auctor)
133–145 128–140 Shift by +5. (Legal Auctor)
146 (1–4) 141–143 Continuous mapping. (Legal Auctor)
147–168 144–165 Shift by +3. (Legal Auctor)
169 167 Shift by +2. (Legal Auctor)
170 New “Repeals & Savings” provision. (Legal Auctor, legallyin.com)


Kapil Sibal’s Concerns on IEA → BSA and Related Criminal Law Reforms

1. Warnings Against Authoritarianism

Sibal voiced strong worries that the new criminal laws—including the BSA—risk enabling dictatorial tendencies, granting sweeping powers to the police and the state:

  • He accused the government of aiming to “bring dictatorship in the country through laws.” The Economic TimesHindustan Times

  • He warned that these laws might allow action against judges, the Auditor General, and civil servants, threatening institutional independence. The Economic Times

2. Unconstitutional and Dangerous

He labeled the bills—including the BSA—as “completely unconstitutional” and dangerous:

  • "It is completely unconstitutional… strikes at the root of the independence of the judiciary." The Economic TimesHindustan Times

  • He urged judges to stay vigilant, warning that these laws could imperil the nation's future. Hindustan Times

3. Lack of Democratic Process

Sibal criticized the process used to pass these laws:

  • He pointed out that the bills were propelled through Parliament when hundreds of opposition MPs were suspended, undercutting democratic debate. The Times of IndiaThePrint

  • He also said that although the laws claimed to be “Indian-ising” the legal system, they were "90% the same" as the colonial-era versions and lacked any genuine “Indian-ness.” The Times of India

4. Totalitarian Shift & Federalism Threat

In a public lecture, Sibal described the new laws as a totalitarian shift, undermining federal values:

  • He warned that the new provisions allowing FIRs and investigations from anywhere in the country could be misused to target opposition or dissent. "Rest The Case"

  • He also criticized the extended police custody period (60–90 days) as extreme and oppressive—comparing it unfavorably to liberal democracies, where suspects are ordinarily produced before a magistrate within 24 hours. "Rest The Case"

5. Draconian Laws and Opacity

Sibal echoed concerns raised by the legal community and bar associations:

  • He labeled the new laws as draconian, passed without sufficient pre-legislative consultation, despite opposition from several senior lawyers and jurists. ThePrintThe Wire


Download - Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023


Comments

  1. Clauses have been revised and news additions in digital evidences

    ReplyDelete

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