IPC 327 vs BNS 327
● Retained in BNSVoluntarily Causing Hurt to Extort Property, or to Constrain to an Illegal Act
Section 327 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, deals with situations where a person causes hurt to another with the intention of extorting property, valuable security, or compelling them to commit an illegal act.
Key points:
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The act must involve voluntarily causing hurt.
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The motive is to extort property or valuable security or force the victim into an illegal act.
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Punishment: Imprisonment up to 10 years and also liable to fine.
This section ensures protection against criminal intimidation through physical violence. For instance, if a person beats someone to force them to hand over money or sign unlawful documents, it falls under IPC 327.
Voluntarily Causing Hurt to Extort Property, or to Constrain to an Illegal Act
Section 327 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, mirrors IPC 327. It punishes individuals who voluntarily cause hurt to extort property, valuable security, or compel someone to engage in an illegal activity.
Key points:
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Covers both physical violence for extortion and forcing a victim to perform an unlawful act.
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Punishment: Imprisonment up to 10 years and also liable to fine.
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Protects individuals from coercive tactics involving assault.
For example, assaulting a businessman to make him sign away property rights, or beating someone to force participation in illegal acts, falls under BNS 327. This ensures continuity of protection under modern law.
What changed?
This provision was carried over to the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita with substantially the same wording — the section was renumbered from IPC IPC 327 to BNS BNS 327.