Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

SC questions probe in Hadiya case

- Bhadra Sinha letters@hindustant­imes.com

The Supreme Court virtually revisited on Tuesday its earlier orders into the alleged forced conversion and marriage of a Kerala woman, questionin­g the annulment of her marriage and a federal anti-terror probe into a case that has deepened religious faultlines.

A bench headed by Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra questioned a Kerala high court order in May that scrapped the marriage between 24-year-old Hadiya, who converted to Islam, and Shafin Jahan. The top court also questioned its own August decision ordering a National Investigat­ion Agency probe.

Hadiya, who was earlier called Akhila, is in her father’s custody JANUARY Akhila’s father Mani filed habeas corpus in Kerala HC alleging she was missing and had been forcibly converted to Islam.

JUNE Akhila testified she had converted to Islam of her own free will. HC dismissed Mani’s petition

AUGUST Mani filed second habeas corpus, this time alleging Akhila had been converted at the behest of the Islamic State.

in Thiruvanan­thapuram, with many activists alleging that she is being tortured by her kin.

“A father can’t have control over 24-year-old girl. It might send the girl to a custodian or an DECEMBER According to certificat­es submitted by

Akhila, now Hadiya, she got married to Shafin Jahan.

MAY HC annulled the wedding on the petition filed by Mani and ordered probe into allegation­s of forcible conversion

Hearing a petition by Akhila’s husband challengin­g the HC order, the SC directed NIA to investigat­e the alleged forced conversion

organisati­on,” the top court said. It also questioned an earlier order passed in August by a bench led by former CJI JS Khehar that constitute­d an NIA probe into the marriage and alleged forced conversion. Hadiya’s father alleges she was forcefully converted by organised groups with links to terrorist agencies.

Jahan’s counsel told the court that the NIA probe into Jahan and Hadiya’s marriage hits at the very foundation of the multi-religious society.

The case put spotlight back on the controvers­ial “love jihad,” a term coined by some fringe Hindu outfits to describe cases of what they believe are forced marriages between Muslim men and Hindu women.

Though the presence of the “love jihad” is still disputed, Kerala police had warned about a syndicate that funded the conversion of young women to the Muslim community many years ago.

NEW DELHI:

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