Monday, August 18, 2025
Haryana

The Dawn of a New Era: Haryana Charts a Bold Course Towards Restorative Justice

August 17, 2025 06:19 PM
The Dawn of a New Era: Haryana Charts a Bold Course Towards Restorative Justice

Punjab Newsline, Chandigarh-

Haryana Government has introduced the Community Service Guidelines, 2025, a policy designed to replace jail terms for certain first-time offenders with structured, socially useful work. This landmark reform, anchored in the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, reflects a deliberate shift from retribution to rehabilitation a philosophy increasingly embraced by progressive legal systems around the world.

Additional Chief Secretary, Home & Administration of Justice, Dr. Sumita Misra, who was instrumental in drafting the guidelines described them as “a framework where justice restores as much as it corrects.” She underscored that the intent was not to diminish the seriousness of offences, but to harness them as moments of transformation. “Every offence leaves a scar on society, but also an opportunity the opportunity to turn a wrong into a public good,” she said.

Dr. Misra informed that under the new policy, judges will have the discretion to assign community service in place of imprisonment for eligible offenders. The scope of tasks is wide-ranging: planting trees along riverbanks, assisting in rural health centres, maintaining heritage sites, cleaning public parks, and contributing to social welfare campaigns such as Swachh Bharat. Each assignment will be carefully matched to an offender’s capabilities taking into account age, physical health, and skill set to ensure that the service is productive for the community and personally meaningful for the individual. This approach, is designed to tackle one of the most pressing issues in the Indian criminal justice system: overcrowded prisons. By redirecting low-risk offenders to constructive service, the burden on correctional facilities is eased, while communities benefit from tangible improvements, she added.

The guidelines also break new ground in their use of monitoring technology. Attendance will be confirmed through biometric verification, while work will be documented with geo-tagged photographs and videos to provide an irrefutable record of compliance. Periodic progress reports will be submitted to the courts, enabling judicial officers to track each offender’s contribution in real time. Officials involved in the programme will receive detailed orientation sessions to ensure uniform application across districts.

She further stated that the policy includes tailored provisions for vulnerable populations. Juveniles in conflict with the law will participate in supervised activities such as NCC training, skill-building workshops, and environmental projects that foster discipline and a sense of purpose. Women offenders will be placed in environments where they can contribute meaningfully while maintaining safety and dignity including Nari Niketans, Anganwadi centres, maternity wards, and child care facilities.

At its heart, the Community Service Guidelines, 2025 seek to cultivate a broader culture of responsibility. By requiring offenders to contribute directly to the welfare of the communities they may have harmed, the state hopes to instil lasting lessons in empathy, accountability, and citizenship.

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