Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

HC gives split verdict on marital rape pleas

- Richa Banka

NEW DELHI: The Delhi high court on Wednesday gave a split judgment on pleas seeking to criminalis­e marital rape and to do away with the exception in the rape laws that insulate husbands while referring the matter to the Supreme Court.

Justice Rajiv Shakdher said the exception is violative of the Constituti­on’s Article 14, which provides for equality and equal protection of the laws. Justice C Hari Shankar said that the provision does not violate any law and would continue to exist.

Exception 2 of the Indian Penal Code’s Section 375 decriminal­ises marital rape. It says sexual intercours­e by a man with his wife, who is not under 15, is not rape.

On February 21, the high court reserved its judgment after marathon hearings on the pleas filed by NGO RIT Foundation, All India Democratic Women’s Associatio­n, and two individual­s in 2015 seeking to strike down the exception on the grounds that it discrimina­ted against married women sexually assaulted by their husbands. The court refused to give further time to the Centre saying it was neither here nor there. The court said it would take into considerat­ion the Centre’s 2017 stance.

In 2017, the Centre opposed the pleas saying India cannot blindly follow the West and criminalis­e marital rape as “several factors” have to be taken into account. In January, the government told the court that marital rape cannot be criminalis­ed until its consultati­on with stakeholde­rs is complete.

Union minister Smriti Irani in February told Parliament the protection of women and children is a priority but condemning every marriage as violent and every man rapist is not advisable. She was responding to Communist Party of India member Binoy Viswam’s query on marital rape.

The Centre on February 3 told the high court the issue of criminalis­ing marital rape involves a socio-legal impact and intimate family relations that cannot be judged on the basis of some arguments by lawyers. It added that a “comprehens­ive approach” is required instead of a strictly legal view to come to a

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