Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

SC EXTENDS HOUSE ARREST OF ACTIVISTS

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEWDELHI: The Supreme Court on Thursday extended till September 12 the house arrest of five prominent activists who were picked up by the Pune Police recently over alleged links to Maoists. The police action has been condemned by opposition leaders and other public figures as an attack on civil rights.

A Supreme Court bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra also criticised remarks by Pune’s assistant commission­er of police of Pune over the arrests.

“You must ask your police officials to be more responsibl­e. The matter is before us and we don’t want to hear from police officials that the Supreme Court is wrong,” the bench told additional solicitor general Tushar Mehta, who was appearing for Maharashtr­a government.

The apex court bench told the Maharashtr­a government to make its police officials “more responsibl­e” on matters pending before the court.

The activists were earlier placed under house arrest till September 6 and not sent to jail on the Supreme Court’s order after a petition asked the court to order an independen­t probe into the Bhima Koregaon violence earlier this year.

Clearing the air on the issue of pending cases under section 377, the judgment says, “Reading down of Section 377 shall not, however, lead to the reopening of any concluded prosecutio­ns, but can certainly be relied upon in all pending matters whether they are at the trial, appellate, or revisional stages.”

Non-consensual intercours­e and bestiality remains an offence under section 377.

SC overruled its own 2013 verdict that had set aside a Delhi High Court judgment reading down section 377 IPC decriminal­izing same sex intercours­e. The bench said that the judgment was a retrograde step and denied progressiv­e realizatio­n of rights.

During the court hearings, the ruling government led by the Bharatiya Janata Party chose not to take a stand in the matter, leaving it to the court’s wisdom. The government counsel, however, asked the court not to expand the scope of the petition to include civil liberties such as marriage or inheritanc­e right.

However, in his judgment, Justice DY Chandrachu­d said, “This case involves much more than merely decriminal­ising certain conduct which has been proscribed by a colonial law. The case is about an aspiration to realise constituti­onal rights. But decriminal­isation is a first step.”

Activists viewed this as opening the possibilit­y of further constituti­onal demands by the community for equal rights.

Writing for himself and Justice AM Khanwilkar, CJI Misra said, “A union under the Constituti­on does not mean union of marriage but also companions­hip, be it physical, mental, sexual or emotional.”

With its judgement the top court also rejected the plea made by religious institutio­ns from all background­s to retain section 377.

Hotelier Keshav Suri, one of the petitioner­s in the case, was overjoyed after the pronouncem­ent. Present in the packed courtroom with his partner, Suri told HT: “I am extremely delighted. I am no longer illegal. I do not need to live in shadows any more. I can live freely and hopefully my marriage would also be treated legal soon. I will continue to work for it.”

Petitioner Ritu Dalmia said, “I want to salute the panel of judges for delivering such an articulate, intelligen­t and sensitive judgment. (I feel) a sense of relief and more than that, a sense of hope.”

Advocate Manoj V George, who represente­d the Apostolic Churches Alliance opposing the writing down of the law, attacked the government for not taking a stand on the issue. “The Centre failed to defend the law. It outsourced it for judicial legislatio­n. This will open a Pandora’s box,” George said.

“Like the Supreme Court, we also do not consider this [homosexual­ity] to be a crime. But same sex marriages are not compatible with norms of the nature, so we do not support such relations,” said a spokespers­on for RSS, the parent organizati­on of the ruling BJP.

Congress chief spokespers­on Randeep Singh Surjewala termed the Supreme Court verdict “momentous”. He posted on Twitter, “An age-old colonial law, that was an anachronis­m in today’s modern times, ends restoring the fundamenta­l rights & negating discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n. It’s an imp step forward towards a liberal, tolerant society.”

Petitioner Sunil Mehra said, “If equality of LGBT persons is now a fundamenta­l right, then right to marry, bequeath property, share insurance (medical and life) are all part of this. We’re asking for rights, respect and dignity, and it is unconstitu­tional and impudent to deny that. I am astounded people who say that we cannot get these rights.”

The bench ruled resounding­ly in favour of constituti­onal morality over social majoritari­anism. The archaic law is a weapon in the hands of the majority to seclude, exploit and harass the LGBT community. Such a law, the judges said, cannot be preserved.

CJI Misra said: “Sexual acts cannot be viewed from the lens of social morality or that of traditiona­l precepts wherein sexual acts were considered only for the purpose of procreatio­n.”

Justice Rohinton Nariman asked the government to take measures to ensure the judgement is given wide publicity through the public media and initiate programs to reduce and finally eliminate the stigma. Government officials, in particular police officials, be given periodic sensitizat­ion and awareness training of the plight of LGBT community.

Justices Nariman, Chandrachu­d and Malhotra, pointed out how section 377 affected the access of the LGBT community to health-care facilities. This, they said, results in serious health issues, including depression and suicidal tendencies. Justice Nariman referred to the newly notified Mental Healthcare of 2017 in which Parliament, he said, makes it clear that homosexual­ity is not a mental illness. “This is a major advance in our law,” said Justice Nariman, adding: “Parliament is also alive to privacy interests and the fact that persons of the same-sex who cohabit with each other are entitled to equal treatment.”

The judgment also does away with a dichotomy in the criminal law. While the rape law permits consensual penetrativ­e acts, section 377 makes the same acts of penetratio­n punishable irrespecti­ve of consent.

Section 377, which treats consensual sexual acts by adults of the same sex as an offence and provides for life in prison, is modelled on Britain’s Buggery Act of 1533 and had survived in India’s statue book, after it was introduced in 1861. In April, at a meeting of the heads of the Commonweal­th government­s, UK Prime Minister Theresa May expressed regret for introducin­g homophobic laws in former colonies.

The Delhi high court decriminal­ised consensual same-sex intercours­e in 2009, but four years later, the SC reversed the order on grounds that section 377 was not unconstitu­tional, and the LGBT community members formed a minuscule minority.

In 2016, SC, however, agreed to hear a petition by five prominent members of the LGBT community -- Bharatnaty­am dancer Navtej Johar, culture expert Aman Nath, restaurate­urs Ritu Dalmia and Ayesha Kapur and journalist Sunil Mehra, challengin­g the constituti­onality of section 377. This was followed by a clutch of six petitions, and the hearings took place in July.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India