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was historic day in the history of Indian Parliament when three archaic and colonial laws namely Indian Penal Code, 1860, Code of Criminal Procedure, 1873 and Indian Evidence Act, 1872 where replaced and substituted with three novel Indian laws which were crafted with utmost ingenuity taking into concern the exigency and urgency of time namely; The Bhartiya Nyaya (Second) Sanhita, Bhartiya Nagarik Suraksha (Second) Sanhita and The Bhartiya Sakshya (Second) Act.The three replaced archaic laws were vestiges of colonial hangover which were ill suited in current time and age.Of late the Indian Criminal justice system had earned the ignominity for the pendency and delay in court cases and abysmally delayed justice delivery system.The current system had invited th e wrath of intelligentsia for low conviction rate and overcrowded prisons.It is expected that the recently introduced three laws will bring modernization and liberalization in Indian criminal justice system.These recently revised criminal laws have overhauled the definitions of certain typical offences such as mob violence, terrorism and the offences which jeopardizes nation's sovereignty and security.However the true fruits of these rejig in Indian Criminal justice system can be realized only when there is complete reevaluation in institutional structures and practices.
Vijeta Shrivastava (Sun,) studied this question.