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The Evidence Act Amendment 2022

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The Evidence Act Amendment 2022

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The Evidence Act, 1872: “digital”

amendment already obsolete?

The much-anticipated amendment of the Evidence Act, 1872 was put into effect on 20
November 2022. The amendment brought digital and electronic records into the fold. It also
made forensic evidence admissible under sections 3(3), 45, 45A, 73B, and 89A. The
controversial provision of "character evidence" was also done away with. These changes are
welcome. However, the real question is whether the amendment is really as "up-to-date" or as
effective as the legislature might believe it is. Let us evaluate how impactful this amendment
will be, in the wake of 2023.

The first thing to mention is that digital content had already been used in the trial as evidence
in certain circumstances, even before this amendment. For example, in State v Qamrul Islam
& Others (2017), it was held that video footage is to be considered as a "document", under
the meaning of section 2 of the 1872 Act. A similar court ruling in Biswajit Murder Case
(2018) declared video footage, and still photographs as admissible evidence. Moreover, in
Rifat Murder Case (2020), CCTV footage was used in the trial as substantial evidence that
helped in identifying and convicting the accused.

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Considering these facts, the inclusion of a specialist section, as opposed to a generalised one,
leaves much to be desired. The definition clause of "digital evidence" in section 3 of the Act
specifically picks certain existing technologies as the namesake. If we consider the
exponential innovation of technology in recent years, it is very likely that the way we
perceive, and store information will advance, making much of the current technology
obsolete. That could create the need for further amending of the law in the very near future.

The use of forensic evidence has been a fact in our courts, for a fairly long time. The new
section 3(3) includes blood, semen, hair, organs, DNA, fingerprints, eye impression as
forensic evidence. This will hopefully remove any doubts and confusion, if there still were
any, as to their admissibility in court. However, the specific nature of the provision brings
valid criticism, in that it may as well prevent the admissibility of newer types of emerging
forensic technologies that are not yet in widespread use but will be available soon; for
example, "proteomics" and "molecular profiling", to name a few.

Secondly, the amendment has removed the much controversial "character evidence". Section
146(3) has been amended, making questions about a rape victim's character possible only
with the court's permission. Such wide discretion of the judge allows a certain bias of the
judge to play a dangerous role. In addition, section 155(4), which allowed for the credit of a
witness to be impeached, based on "immoral character", has been completely omitted.

Although the omission is certainly worthy of praise, only time will tell how much effective it
really is. Experts suspect that the changes brought in the "character evidence" provisions will
not be enough. That is because character evidence can still be produced in court, bypassing
section 155(4), through section 11. Under section 11(1), facts not otherwise relevant are
relevant if they conflict with any fact-in-issue or relevant fact. The section can easily be
interpreted by clever lawyers into allowing any facts regarding a victim's character. Thus, the
high threshold placed in section 146(3) can be rendered useless by this loophole. The
interesting thing is the exact same situation took place in India after its Evidence Act was
amended. Character evidence continued to haunt the process of the courts in this way. There
is no reason to believe that Bangladesh will not meet a similar fate.

However, this amendment is not all doom and gloom. Despite its many flaws, the amendment
has succeeded in removing any vagueness and confusion that existed in the courts in
admitting digital and forensic evidence. This will certainly help in speeding up the court
process. But the amendment is unlikely to impact our evidence system in any major,
meaningful way. Hopefully, the government notices these flaws, and fix them in due time.

The writer is a Student of Law, University of Dhaka.

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