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It is time to declare marital rape a crime

- MURALI KRISHNAN This article was provided by Deutsche Welle

Last week, a two-judge bench of the Delhi High Court delivered a split verdict on petitions seeking to criminalis­e marital rape in India, in a setback for women’s rights groups that have long campaigned for its criminalis­ation. While one judge struck down Section 375 of the Indian Penal Code, which says a man cannot be prosecuted for rape within marriage, the other judge disagreed and upheld the provision. Favouring criminalis­ation, Justice Rajiv Shakdher said the section violated Article 14 of the Indian constituti­on — which guarantees equality before the law — and therefore should be struck down. “The right to withdraw consent at any given point in time forms the core of the woman’s right to life and liberty,” he said in his order.

Justice Hari Shankar, however, disagreed and said the provision does not violate any law and the exception was “reasonable” and could continue. The case is now expected to be appealed in the Supreme Court. How did women’s rights organisati­ons react? The split judgment drew widespread criticism from women’s rights organisati­ons.

“The judge is saying that even if the husband has sex with the wife without the latter’s consent, he cannot he considered her rapist since this would call into question the sacred nature of the marriage institutio­n. This is bizarre reasoning,” Kavita Krishnan of the All-India Progressiv­e Women’s Associatio­n told DW. “Does a woman have to surrender her dignity and bodily autonomy when she marries? Does she become the property of her husband? This judgment, while not surprising, is neverthele­ss shameful,” she added.

Priya Kumari, a lawyer, shares a similar view. “To think that criminalis­ing the provision would be misused and sabotage the institutio­n of marriage, is outdated and flawed,” she told DW. Mariam Dhawale, national general secretary of the All India Democratic Women’s Associatio­n (AIDWA) and one of the petitioner­s in the case, said she was dejected with the split verdict.

“We will appeal against the marital rape exemption, an archaic law which came into being 160 years ago,” Dhawale told DW. The verdict has highlighte­d the public divide on an issue that involves not just the letter of the law but complex social customs. During the hearings in court, both the Delhi government and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s federal government argued that marital rape could not be criminalis­ed unless there is societal consensus on the issue.

The government said criminalis­ation could have a “destabilis­ing effect on the institutio­n of marriage.” Religious groups and men’s rights activists have also opposed the petitions, saying it could be misused to harass men by leveling frivolous charges. What do men’s rights groups say? “Clearly, a binary and monochroma­tic approach to such a complex issue does grave injustice,” J Sai Deepak, a lawyer representi­ng Men Welfare Trust (MWT), one of the NGOs opposing the criminalis­ation, told DW.

“Critically, it is evident from a reading of both opinions that there is need for greater empirical data on the subject, in addition to collection of inputs from a wide array of stakeholde­rs,” he added. “To my mind, the legislatur­e, and not a court of law, is best suited to undertake such an exercise.”

“This is not the concern of the court. All stakeholde­rs must be consulted and if this was criminalis­ed it would have set a wrong precedent,” a member of the MWT said. Marital rape is a crime in most countries worldwide but India remains among the 30-odd nations where it is not criminalis­ed. Since it is not a crime, the National Crime Records Bureau does not maintain any separate statistics on marital rape. However, more than 30% of women in India who have ever been married, have experience­d spousal physical, sexual, or emotional violence, according to the latest round of the National Family Health Survey.

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