Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Steps against NRIs who desert wives ‘untenable’

- Moushumi Das Gupta moushumi.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

AN INTERMINIS­TERIAL PANEL HAD BEEN CONSTITUTE­D LAST YEAR TO REVIEW THE LEGAL AND REGULATORY CHALLENGES FACED BY DESERTED WOMEN

NEW DELHI: The law ministry has shot down as legally untenable a string of measures, such as impounding of passports and confiscati­on of property, suggested by an inter-ministeria­l group to deter NRI men from deserting their wives, officials familiar with the developmen­t have said.

Women and child developmen­t (WCD) minister Maneka Gandhi last week wrote to external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj, who heads the group, to call another meeting to end the deadlock that threatens to derail the move to help abandoned wives.

“The law ministry’s position has resulted in all efforts made so far coming to a standstill. There will be no deterrent unless stringent steps are taken against … NRI men who have failed to respond to repeated summons,” an official said on condition of anonymity.

With more and more Indians going abroad to study and work, there has been a sharp rise in men deserting their wives after marrying them in India.

The National Commission for Women (NCW) received 346 complaints from such women in 2014, the latest year for which figures are available.

They were mostly about men preventing women from travelling by taking away their passports, disappeari­ng after marriage, abandoning them in foreign countries and keeping children abroad with no contact with the mother.

The number would be much higher as only a handful of women come forward with their complaints, WCD ministry officials say.

The ministeria­l panel was set up in 2017 to review the legal and regulatory challenges faced by women. Nitin Gadkari, Ravi Shankar Prasad, Maneka Gandhi, Smriti Irani, Narendra Singh Tomar and VK Singh are the other members of the group.

The panel also suggested that the external affairs ministry put on its website summons issued to NRI men after they fail to respond to the one sent to their address. Such notices were to be treated as “deemed to have been served”.

The current practice is that once a woman lodges a complaint, police write to embassies that issue a summons but in most cases it is not received as either the address is false or the person has moved to a new place.

“The law ministry has not agreed to this proposal also. Without this, the regulatory framework that the inter-ministeria­l panel had recommende­d to help women abandoned or abused by NRI husbands will not have any meaning,” a WCD ministry official said.

Following the recommenda­tions, Gandhi had written to the home and law ministries to make necessary changes in the law to make the suggestion­s operationa­l.The ministry had on December 20 constitute­d an integrated nodal agency for addressing NRI marital disputes.

The agency, headed by WCD secretary Rakesh Srivastava, has held eight meetings and issued six lookout circulars for husbands who have ignored nonbailabl­e warrants.

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