Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Govt opposes petitions for same-sex marriage

- Richa Banka Richa.banka@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The Centre told the Delhi high court on Thursday that a marriage in India can be recognised only if it is between a “biological man” and a “biological woman” capable of producing children, strongly opposing the validation of same-sex marital unions.

The government said any interferen­ce by a court in the marital statute based on personal laws will create “havoc” in society and will run afoul of the intent of Parliament in framing the laws. It said a fundamenta­l right cannot be an “untrammell­ed right” and can’t override other constituti­onal principles.

In an affidavit filed before a bench comprising justices Rajiv Sahai Endlaw and Amit Bansal, the government opposed pleas seeking legalisati­on of same-sex marriages and said the laws mandate that “marriage is a bond between a biological man and a biological woman”.

The institutio­n of marriage has a sanctity attached to it and in major parts of the country it is regarded as a “sacrament”, the government argued. It said that in India, despite statutory recognitio­n of the relationsh­ip of marriage between a biological man and a biological woman, marriage depends on age-old customs, rituals, practices, cultural ethos and societal values.

In a plea filed before the court, Abhijit Iyer Mitra, Gopi Shankar, Giti Thadani and G Oorvasi noted that a marriage between people of the same gender wasn’t still possible despite the Supreme Court decriminal­ising consensual homosexual acts in 2018 and sought a declaratio­n recognisin­g such unions under the Hindu Marriage Act (HMA).

Through counsel Raghav Awasthi, the petition contended that the HMA does not distinguis­h between heterosexu­al and homosexual marriages if one were to go by how it is worded. The act very clearly states that marriage can be solemnised between “any two Hindus,” the petition argued.

The second petition was filed by two mental health profession­als — Kavita Arora, 47, and Ankita Khanna, 36 — seeking legal recognitio­n of their marriages under two different civil laws, the Special Marriage Act and the Foreign Marriage Act.

The third plea was filed by two men — Vaibhav Jain, an Indian citizen, and Parag Vijay Mehta, an overseas citizen of India — who got married in the United States, where same-sex marriage is legal, in 2017. They also sought the same relief as Arora and Khanna, stating that an Indian consulate had refused to register their union this year under the FMA.

The government said Western ideas cannot be imported to the Indian context, citing the Indian constituti­onal law and jurisprude­nce. It said that seeking the registrati­on of such marriages has more ramificati­ons than simple legal recognitio­n, including family issues and “public significan­ce”.

“Family issues are far beyond mere recognitio­n and registrati­on of marriage between persons belonging to the same gender. Living together as partners and having sexual relationsh­ip by same-sex individual­s {which is decriminal­ised now] is not comparable with the Indian family unit concept of a husband, a wife and children which necessaril­y presuppose a biological man as a ‘husband’, a biological woman as a ‘wife’ and the children born out of the union between the two,” the Centre told the high court.

Expressing disappoint­ment, Mitra said: “The government’s position is curious given the Act itself wiped out several recorded Hindu traditions that existed prior to codificati­on. Whoever drafted the response also seems clueless about the 60-odd genders recognised in Hindu historical texts not to mention it has failed to provide any textual basis prohibitin­g the marriage of these 60-odd genders.”

“The progeny argument is particular­ly ridiculous because it implies any marriage shorn of biological offspring is not a marriage. In short this is a shoddy and poorly drafted response,” he added.

In its affidavit, the Centre said the “celebratio­n of a marriage gives rise to not just legal but moral and social obligation­s, particular­ly the reciprocal duty of support placed upon spouses and their joint responsibi­lity for supporting and raising children born of the marriage and to ensure their proper mental and psychologi­cal growth in the most natural way possible”.

“Relationsh­ip in marriage has more than personal significan­ce at least in part because human beings are social beings whose humanity is expressed through their relationsh­ips with other. Entering into marriage therefore is to enter into a relationsh­ip that has public significan­ce as well.” “The institutio­n of marriage and family are important social institutio­ns that provide for the security, support and companions­hip of members of our society and bear an important role in the rearing of child and their mental and psychologi­cal upbringing,” the affidavit read. It said the concept of marriage cannot be relegated to merely a concept within the domain of privacy of an individual. The government said that considerin­g the larger statutory framework, it is clear that “there exists a legitimate state interest in limiting the legal recognitio­n of marriage to persons of opposite sexes only”.

“In same sex marriage, it is neither possible nor feasible to term one a husband and the other one a wife... Resultantl­y the statutory scheme of many statutory enactments will become otiose,” it asserted.

On Thursday, the court allowed the Delhi government to be impleaded as a party to the case and posted the matter for further hearing on April 20.

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