Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Govt set to oppose same-sex marriage

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪ ▪

NEW DELHI: A day after the Supreme Court read down section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, India’s lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and queer (LGBTQ) people say the next step in the legal fight will be for civil rights such as same-sex marriage, in– heritance of property, and sharing insurance, among others.

But the Union government, which left it to the court to decide on section 377, has indicated that it is likely to oppose any petition for same-sex marriage.

“If equality of LGBTQ persons is now a fundamenta­l right, then right to marry, bequeath property, share insurance (medical and life) are all part of this. We are asking for rights respect and dignity and it is unconstitu­tional and impudent to deny that. I am astounded at people who say that we cannot get these rights,” said Sunil Mehra, a petitioner in the section 377 case.

A government functionar­y, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said, “Decriminal­isation of same-sex acts was fine but the government would oppose any demand to legalise same-sex marriage.”

The same stand was echoed by the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS), the ideologica­l fount of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party.

“Same-sex marriages are not compatible with norms of nature, so we don’t support them. Bharatiya society doesn’t have the tradition of recognisin­g such relations,” said RSS spokespers­on Arun Kumar.

The 493-page SC judgment on Thursday had spoken at length about how social norms cannot regulate constituti­onal liberties and affirmed the rights of the community without going into the question of civil rights.

The government counsel in July had asked the court to limit itself to Section 377, and not expand to civil rights.

Over the past decade, many queer and trans individual­s have got married in community ceremonies while others have moved to countries that recognise samesex marriages in order to marry their partner.

In fact, one of the petitioner­s before the SC in the Section 377 case spoke of how he planned to move abroad for marriage.

In other countries, such as the US and the UK, legalisati­on of same-sex relationsh­ips has been followed by legal recognitio­n of same-sex marriage, adoption, inheritanc­e among other rights.

Keshav Suri, executive director of Delhi-based Lalit Suri Hospitalit­y Group that operates the Lalit chain of hotels, who married his partner Cryril Feuillbois in Paris in June, said, “It’s unfair that I have more rights in his country than in the country we have chosen to call our home. I am an equal citizen in that country, but he is not one in mine. But yesterday gave us hope, and made me proud to be an Indian. I am considerin­g filing a petition regarding some of these issues.”

The Congress welcomed the reading down of Section 377 on Thursday. When asked on Friday about their position on wider civil rights, Congress chief spokespers­on Randeep Singh Surjewala said, “It is for the government to formulate a position. We will respond accordingl­y.”

Marriage and sexual assault are seen as weapons used against queer people as a means to ‘correct’ their sexuality. It is necessary that the government ensures its citizens are protected from such violence, the SC said.

Anand Grover, a senior Supreme Court advocate and a lawyer in the case, agreed that the question of civil rights was likely to come up soon but added that it was a wide gamut of issues – from workplace discrimina­tion in the private sector and antisexual harassment statutes to rape laws and marriage, adoption and property rights. “The demand has to come from the community. We should be ready, and we will be a part of the case,” he said.

Gautam Yadav, one of the petitioner­s, said the fight for civil rights will start afresh but at the moment everyone is busy celebratin­g. “Decriminal­ising Section 377 is the first step. Marriage and other civil rights is the second,” he said.

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