While the colonial IPC was designed by the British to “rule and punish”, the BNS is based on Indian ethos of Dharma and Nyaya to “serve and provide justice” to citizens.
Soul of BNS
Justice (Nyaya)
Victim Centrality- For the first time, the victim has a say in the withdrawal of cases.
Justice for vulnerable groups. Eg- Stringent punishment for rape and child abuse
Mandatory timelines for filing charge sheets and delivering judgments to prevent “justice delayed is justice denied.”
Equality (Samata)
Providing equal protection of law. Eg- Section 103(2) penalizes Mob Lynching
Gender Inclusivity- expands the definition of “gender” to include transgender individuals
Gender equality. Eg- Uniform Age of Consent
Impartiality (Nishpakshta)
Digitization of Evidence- Eg-Mandating videography of search and seizure operations
Zero FIR- Allows a citizen to file a complaint at any police station regardless of jurisdiction
Scientific Investigation- Shifts the focus from “police testimony” to “forensic truth.”
Accountability of Public Servants- Eg- “deemed sanction” if the government fails to respond to a request within 120 days.
Shift from Doctrine of Punishment to Justice
From Ruler’s Law to Citizen’s Law- IPC was for the British to rule India, BNS is for Indians to govern themselves.
Restorative Punishment- Section 4(f) introduces Community Service for the first time.
In the BNS structure, “Offenses against the Human Body” are moved to the beginning of the code, signaling that human life is more valuable than property rights.
Focus on liberty and privacy – Eg- Deletion of Adultery (Section 497 IPC) and Section 377
Proportionality – Punishment calibrated to gravity of offence. Eg- Reduced punishment scales for minor offences
Victim-centric justice – Eg- Expanded victim compensation framework under section 396
Removing colonial laws. Eg- Repeal of Sedition
Procedural fairness – Emphasis on due process and natural justice.
Simplification- Reducing 511 sections to 358.
Protection of dignity – Eg- Redefinition of sexual offences in gender-neutral and victim-protective language.
Moral Healing (Prayaschit)- upholds Indian ethos of atonement rather than eternal stigmatization of the offender.
Balance between deterrence and justice – Eg- Death penalty retained only for rarest of rare offences
This reorientation strengthens the ethical legitimacy and effectiveness of India’s criminal justice system.