If BNS distinguishes between throwing and administering acid, RPwD Act must too: SC
UPSC Study Note: BNS Acid-Attack Distinction & RPwD Act — Supreme Court Ruling (2026)
1. At a Glance
- The Supreme Court of India (March 2026) directed that the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPwD) Act, 2016 must be amended to include victims who had acid administered/force-fed to them — not just those "disfigured by throwing of acid." [S1][S3]
- The trigger: Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), India's new criminal code, already distinguishes between throwing acid (external) and administering acid (ingestion/internal), but the RPwD Act's Schedule remained frozen at the older, narrower definition. [S1]
- Critical for UPSC: Intersects GS-II (social justice, vulnerable groups, judiciary) and GS-IV (ethics of disability rights); tests knowledge of BNS provisions, RPwD Act structure, and SC's interpretive powers. [S2]
- The ruling illustrates how statutory harmonisation works — courts compelling Parliament/executive to align disability law with updated criminal law. [S3]
2. Why in the News
- 10 March 2026: A Bench of CJI Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi made the observation while hearing a petition by Shaheen Malik, herself an acid attack survivor and founder of NGO Brave Souls Foundation, seeking inclusion of forced-acid-ingestion victims under the RPwD Act. [S1][S3]
- The Additional Solicitor-General Archana Pathak Dave, appearing for the Union, conceded that the RPwD Act's definitions may require formal amendment to extend the statute's ambit. [S1]
- Prior related development: SC had separately directed that acid attackers who force victims to ingest acid should be tried under attempt to murder provisions, not merely acid-attack sections. [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2013 | Acid attacks criminalised under IPC Sections 326A & 326B (after Laxmi v. Union of India PIL); SC also directed regulations on acid sale |
| 2016 | RPwD Act, 2016 enacted (replaced PWD Act, 1995); acid attack victims included as one of 21 specified disabilities in the Schedule |
| 2023 | BNS, 2023 enacted (replaced IPC 1860, effective 1 July 2024); Sections 124 & 125 BNS cover acid attacks — distinguishing throwing (§124) and administering/voluntarily causing grievous hurt by acid |
| 2026 | SC observes statutory mismatch; RPwD Act's Schedule still limits definition to victims "disfigured by throwing of acid," thereby excluding ingestion victims from disability certificates and welfare schemes |
| 2026 (SC order) | Court used extraordinary powers to treat its order as a deemed amendment to the RPwD Act Schedule, retrospective from 2016; directed Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment to notify formal amendment within two weeks [S3] |
4. Core Static Facts
BNS Provisions (Acid Attacks) - Section 124, BNS: Voluntarily throwing/attempting to throw acid with intent to cause grievous hurt — punishment: minimum 10 years, extendable to life imprisonment + fine - Section 125, BNS: Voluntarily causing grievous hurt by acid attack — minimum 10 years to life + fine - BNS distinguishes between throwing (external disfigurement) and administering (internal/ingestion-based harm) [S1]
RPwD Act, 2016 — Key Facts - Enacted to implement UNCRPD (UN Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities), ratified by India in 2007 - Repealed: Persons with Disabilities (Equal Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full Participation) Act, 1995 - Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment - Lists 21 types of disabilities (up from 7 under the 1995 Act) - Acid attack victims listed as one of 21 specified disabilities in the Schedule - Current definition (pre-amendment): persons "disfigured due to violent assaults such as throwing of acid" — excludes internal/ingestion injuries [S2][S3] - Mandates 4% reservation for PwDs in government jobs (up from 3% under 1995 Act) - Mandates 5% reservation in higher educational institutions
The Gap - Ingestion victims suffer internal injuries (oesophageal burns, damage to swallowing/speaking functions) — no external disfigurement → ineligible for disability certificates under current definition → excluded from reservations, welfare schemes, compensation [S3]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- SC invoked its Article 142 powers (complete justice) to treat its order as a deemed amendment pending formal legislative action. [S3]
- Distinction between throwing and administering acid in BNS is Section 124 vs. 125 framework — SC argued statutory harmonisation demands RPwD Act mirror this. [S1]
- Retrospective application from 2016 means past victims who were denied certificates may now claim them. [S3]
- Perpetrators who force ingestion may also face attempt to murder charges (Section 109 BNS), creating dual-track prosecution. [S4]
Social / Gender
- Acid attacks overwhelmingly target women and girls — overwhelmingly domestic/intimate partner violence.
- Ingestion cases involve a distinct, often more insidious form of assault (coercion, force-feeding) — victims have been doubly excluded: from criminal justice parity and disability welfare. [S3]
- Petitioner Shaheen Malik exemplifies survivor-led advocacy — a model of affected-community participation in legislative reform. [S1]
Ethical / Governance
- The gap between BNS (2023/2024) and RPwD Act (2016) represents legislative lag — a systemic failure to harmonise statutes updated at different times. [S1]
- CJI Kant's oral observation — "perpetrators of crime should not be able to take undue advantage" — frames the issue as closing loopholes exploited by offenders. [S1]
- Ministry's concession that "definitions may have to be amended" signals executive acknowledgment without proactive legislative initiative. [S1]
Administrative
- Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment directed to issue formal notification within two weeks of SC order. [S3]
- Medical boards across India must be retrained/notified to issue disability certificates on basis of internal injuries, not only visible disfigurement. [S3]
- Risk of uneven implementation: state-level medical boards may lag in updating assessment protocols.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 1 July 2024: BNS came into force, replacing IPC; Sections 124–125 codify acid attack provisions with the throwing/administering distinction. [S1]
- March 2026: SC Bench (CJI Surya Kant + J. Bagchi) hears Shaheen Malik petition; observes RPwD Act must align with BNS taxonomy. [S1]
- March 2026: SC passes order treating definition expansion as deemed amendment, retrospective from 2016; directs formal notification within two weeks. [S3]
- March 2026: SC separately directs that acid attackers forcing ingestion should face attempt-to-murder trial (Section 109 BNS). [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- BNS Section 124 covers voluntarily throwing acid; the minimum sentence is 10 years imprisonment.
- The RPwD Act, 2016 lists 21 types of disabilities — replacing the 1995 Act's list of 7.
- Nodal ministry for RPwD Act implementation: Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment.
- RPwD Act, 2016 implements India's obligations under UNCRPD, ratified by India in 2007.
- Acid attack victims were added to the disability list under RPwD Act, 2016 (not the earlier 1995 Act).
- The RPwD Act mandates 4% reservation in government jobs for PwDs (vs. 3% under 1995 Act).
- The 2026 SC ruling on Shaheen Malik petition applies the amendment retrospectively from 2016.
- The Bench was headed by Chief Justice Surya Kant with Justice Joymalya Bagchi.
- BNS replaced the Indian Penal Code, 1860; it came into force on 1 July 2024.
- Current RPwD Act definition of acid attack victim: persons "disfigured due to violent assaults such as throwing of acid" — administering/ingestion excluded before 2026 order.
- SC directed the Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment to notify formal amendment within two weeks of the order.
- The petitioner, Shaheen Malik, is both an acid attack survivor and founder of Brave Souls Foundation.
- SC invoked Article 142 (complete justice jurisdiction) to pass the deemed-amendment order.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: - GS-II: Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; social justice; judiciary — SC's role in law-making; statutory harmonisation - GS-IV: Ethics of state responsibility toward victims; equity in law
Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "Issues relating to development and management of social sector/services relating to Health, Education, Human Resources"; "Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population"; "Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States"; "Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability"
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) distinguishes between throwing and administering acid, yet the RPwD Act, 2016 remains silent on the latter. Critically examine the statutory gap and the role of the Supreme Court in bridging it." (GS-II, 250 words) 2. "Acid attack survivors who suffer internal injuries through forced ingestion face a dual exclusion — from criminal justice and disability welfare. Discuss with reference to recent judicial developments." (GS-II, 250 words) 3. "Judicial legislation through Article 142 is a necessary corrective, but a poor substitute for proactive parliamentary harmonisation. Examine this tension with examples." (GS-II/GS-IV, 150 words)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023 | The statute whose acid-attack taxonomy triggered the SC observation; know Sections 124–125 |
| RPwD Act, 2016 — Full Overview | Parent statute; all 21 disabilities, reservations, UNCRPD obligations |
| UNCRPD (UN Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities) | International treaty framework underlying RPwD Act |
| Laxmi v. Union of India (2013) | Foundational SC ruling that brought acid attacks into criminal law & regulation |
| Article 142 of the Constitution | SC's power to do complete justice — used in this case as a legislative bridge |
| Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS) & Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA) | Other new criminal codes alongside BNS; together replace CrPC and Evidence Act |
| Acid Regulation & Sale Controls | SC 2013 directions + state compliance; linked to prevention dimension |
| Gender-based Violence — Legal Framework | Broader context: POCSO, domestic violence law, survivor rights |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing IPC sections with BNS sections: Acid attacks were under IPC §326A & §326B; under BNS they are §124 & §125. Do not mix these up in answers post-July 2024.
- Wrong ministry: RPwD Act is under Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment, NOT Ministry of Health or Ministry of Women and Child Development.
- 21 vs. 7 disabilities: The 1995 PWD Act had 7 disabilities; RPwD Act 2016 expanded to 21. Prelims frequently tests this distinction.
- Throwing ≠ Administering in BNS: Many aspirants treat all acid attacks identically. BNS explicitly distinguishes them — this is the entire basis of the SC's 2026 observation.
- UNCRPD ratification year: India ratified UNCRPD in 2007, not 2016 (the year the domestic RPwD Act was enacted). These are two separate events.
11. Sources
- [S1] "If BNS distinguishes between throwing and administering acid, RPwD Act must too: SC" — The Hindu, 10 March 2026 (article excerpt provided as primary source) — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPwD) Act, 2016" — RICE IAS / background reference — https://riceias.com/rights-of-persons-with-disabilities-rpwd-act-2016/ — (background reference)
- [S3] "Supreme Court Expands Definition of 'Acid Attack Victims' in Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act to Include Forced Ingestion" — Verdictum.in / search result snippet — https://www.verdictum.in/supreme-court/rights-of-persons-with-disabilities-act-acid-attack-forced-ingestion-1613362 — (Tier 4 equivalent)
- [S4] "Acid attackers forcing victims to ingest acid must be tried under Attempt to Murder: SC" — Rising Kashmir / search result snippet — https://risingkashmir.com/acid-attackers-forcing-victims-to-ingest-acid-must-be-tried-under-attempt-to-murder-sc/ — (Tier 4 equivalent)
- [S5] "Supreme Court Expansion of Disability Rights for Acid Attack Survivors" — EnsureIAS, search result snippet — https://www.ensureias.com/blog/current-affairs/supreme-court-expansion-of-disability-rights-for-acid-attack-survivors — (reference)
Note to aspirants: This note is current as of June 2026. Verify the formal Ministry notification (directed within two weeks of the March 2026 SC order) and any subsequent amendment to the RPwD Act Schedule before the examination.