Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

‘Was Kerala HC justified in annulling Hadiya’s marriage?’

- ▪ letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The Supreme Court on Thursday asked if a roving inquiry could be ordered into the “issue of consent” between two adults who married at will and if the Kerala high court order annulling the marriage of Hadiya, an alleged victim of love jihad, was justified.

The questions from a bench of Chief Justice Dipak Misra and justice AM Khanwilkar and justice DY Chandrachu­d came during the hearing of the Kerala conversion case. “What troubles us is whether there can be a roving inquiry into the issue of consent between two adults who have agreed to marry,” the bench said.

Whether the high court was justified in nullifying the marriage is a pure question of law, it added. “Marriage and investigat­ion are two different things. As far as marriage is concerned, it does not warrant any investigat­ion. Investigat­ion has nothing to do with it. You can investigat­e any other thing,” the court said.

Hadiya, the 25-year-old woman who is at the centre of an alleged love jihad controvers­y, on Tuesday filed an affidavit before the top court, claiming that she willingly converted to Islam and wants to live with her husband Shafin Jahan. The matter had come to the fore when Jahan challenged the Kerala HC order annulling his marriage with Hadiya and sending her to her parents’ custody. On November 27 last year, the apex court freed Hadiya from her parents’ custody and sent her to college to pursue her studies, even as she had pleaded that she should be allowed to go with her husband.

Senior advocate Shyam Divan, appearing for Hadiya’s father, said it was a case of vulnerable adults and the high court was justified in nullifying the marriage by exercising its power under Article 226 of the Constituti­on. “In this case, marriage was used as a pretext to keep it out of the court’s jurisdicti­on,” Divan said.

Hadiya had urged the court to set aside the judgment of the Kerala high court that had annulled the marriage terming it an instance of love jihad. The top court had earlier ordered an NIA probe into a “pattern” where some women were allegedly being converted to Islam.

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