Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Married daughter can’t be denied compassion­ate appointmen­t: HC

- HT Correspond­ent letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH:The Punjab and Haryana high court has ruled that a daughter, if otherwise eligible, can’t be denied compassion­ate appointmen­t, merely because she has got married.

The high court bench of justice AG Masih struck down the provisions of Punjab government’s compassion­ate appointmen­ts policy of 2002, which did not have ‘married daughter’, as a ‘dependent family member’ for considerat­ion for appointmen­t on compassion­ate grounds. The high court said that classifica­tion, if any, has to be based upon reasonable­ness, which is justifiabl­e on the anvil and touchstone, furthering the policy for which the same had been framed.

Violation of gender equality would amount to violation of Articles 14, 15 and 21 of the Constituti­on as guaranteed to all citizens of India, which guarantee equality; protection against discrimina­tion on the basis of caste, sex etc; and protection of life and liberty, respective­ly.

The high court directed the Punjab DGP to issue appointmen­t letter within one month to the woman, who was declared ineligible in 2015 citing that her marital status was a bar against considerat­ion for appointmen­t.

Following this, the woman,

Amarjit Kaur, had approached the high court, challengin­g the decision. Daughter of a head constable, Kashmir Singh, who died in October 2008, she now lives with her widow mother, Jasbir Kaur along with her husband and kids. A report upon verificati­on of source of income had stated that they were surviving on pension benefits of the late head constable and that family was sustaining ‘with great difficulty’.

“Equality cannot be achieved, unless there are equal opportunit­ies for all. If a woman is deprived at the threshold by rendering her ineligible for considerat­ion merely because of her marital status of being a woman, especially when the same is not true for the man, would amount to discrimina­tion on the basis of gender identity,” the bench observed.

HC BENCH STRIKES DOWN PROVISIONS OF PUNJAB GOVERNMENT’S COMPASSION­ATE APPOINTMEN­TS POLICY

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