Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Sabarimala case: SC to frame issues on gender discrimina­tion

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The Supreme Court is scheduled to frame issues for deliberati­on regarding discrimina­tion against women in various religions and at religious places, including Kerala’s Sabarimala temple, on Monday.

A nine-judge Constituti­on bench will consider the issues related to the entry of Muslim women into mosques, female genital mutilation in the Dawoodi Bohra Muslim community and barring of Parsi women, married to non-Parsi men, in the holy fire place at an agiary.

Besides Chief Justice S A Bobde, other judges on the bench are justices R Banumathi, Ashok Bhushan, L Nageswara Rao, M M Shantanago­udar, S A Nazeer, R Subhash Reddy, B R Gavai and Surya Kant.

The apex court had, on January 13, asked four senior lawyers to convene a meeting to decide on the issues to be deliberate­d by it in the matter.

On November 14 last year, while referring the matter to a larger bench, a five-judge bench had said the debate on the constituti­onal validity of religious practices such as a bar on the entry of women and girls into a place of worship was not limited to the Sabarimala case.

It had said such restrictio­ns were there with regard to the entry of Muslim women into mosques and dargahs, and Parsi women, married to non-Parsi men, from entering the holy fire place of an agiary. It set out seven questions of law to be examined by the larger bench.

They include the interplay between freedom of religion under Articles 25 and 26 of the Constituti­on, need to delineate the expression “constituti­onal morality”, the extent to which courts can enquire into particular religious practices, meaning of sections of Hindus under Article 25 and whether “essential religious practices” of a denominati­on or section thereof are protected under Article 26.

While the five-judge bench unanimousl­y agreed to refer religious issues to a larger bench, it gave a 3:2 split verdict on petitions seeking a review of the apex court’s September 2018 decision, allowing women of all ages to enter the Sabarimala shrine in Kerala.00

 ?? REUTERS FILE ?? Devotees queue up inside Sabarimala temple premises.
REUTERS FILE Devotees queue up inside Sabarimala temple premises.

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