Need for Plea Bargaining to Address Judicial Delays in India
Context:
β’ Rising concern over judicial backlog (5+ crore cases) has led to renewed emphasis on plea bargaining as a tool for speedy justice delivery in India.
Key Highlights:
- Problem of Judicial Delays
β’ Over 5 crore pending cases, with 80% in district courts
β’ Leads to undertrial detention, delayed justice, and victim hardship
β’ Weakens contract enforcement and investor confidence
β’ Causes erosion of public trust in judiciary - Legal Framework / Policy Details
β’ Introduced via CrPC Amendment Act, 2005
β’ Now covered under Sections 289β300 of BNSS, 2023
β’ Applicable only for offences with punishment up to 7 years
β’ Excludes crimes against women, children, and socio-economic offences - Concept of Plea Bargaining
β’ Accused pleads guilty voluntarily in exchange for reduced sentence or charges
β’ Requires mutual agreement between accused and prosecution
β’ Conducted under judicial supervision - Global Practices
β’ Widely used in USA, UK, Canada, Australia
β’ In USA, over 90% of criminal cases resolved via plea deals - Challenges / Concerns in India
β’ Low adoption (<1%) due to lack of awareness
β’ Institutional hesitation and cultural resistance
β’ Concerns about coercion or unfair settlements
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Plea Bargaining:
β A legal mechanism for negotiated settlement in criminal cases - BNSS 2023 (Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita):
β Replaces CrPC
β Contains provisions on plea bargaining (Sections 289β300) - Undertrial Prisoners:
β Individuals awaiting trial, often forming majority of prison population - Judicial Backlog:
β Accumulation of pending cases across courts
Relevant Mains Points:
- Need for plea bargaining in India:
β Reduces burden on courts and speeds up justice delivery
β Helps address overcrowding in prisons
β Improves efficiency of criminal justice system - Concerns and safeguards:
β Risk of coerced confessions must be addressed
β Need to ensure voluntariness and fairness
β Strong judicial oversight essential - Comparative global perspective:
β High success in countries like USA shows its effectiveness
β Requires adaptation to Indian socio-legal context - Institutional challenges:
β Lack of training for prosecutors and lawyers
β Absence of incentives for settlement
β Limited public awareness - Way Forward:
β Launch a national mission for plea bargaining promotion
β Conduct capacity building for legal professionals
β Introduce incentive structures for early settlement
β Increase awareness among litigants
β Strengthen procedural safeguards to prevent misuse
UPSC Relevance:
β’ GS 2: Judiciary, Governance, Justice Delivery
β’ GS 4: Ethics (fairness, voluntariness in legal processes)
β’ Prelims: BNSS 2023, Plea Bargaining
