Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Right to privacy verdict formed basis of ruling

- Bhadra Sinha

NEWDELHI: The Supreme Court’s 2017 verdict in the right to privacy case formed the basis for Thursday’s ruling that decriminal­ised adult consensual samesex acts. The four separate but concurring judgements heavily rely on the facet of privacy declared to be an intrinsic part of Article 21 of the Constituti­on last year.

Intimate relations are a matter of complete personal choice. It is a vital personal right, falling within the private protective sphere and realm of individual choice and autonomy, read the lead judgement written by Chief Justice Dipak Misra.

Speaking for Justice AM Khanwilkar and himself, the CJI said Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) restricted an individual’s choice to engage in acts within their private sphere. Personal choices fall within the realm of individual choice and autonomy that is an innate and inalienabl­e part of identity.

“He or she can surrender his or her autonomy wilfully to another individual and their intimacy in privacy is a matter of their choice,” the CJI said.

“As sexual orientatio­n is an essential and innate facet of privacy, the right to privacy takes within its sweep the right of every individual to express their choices in terms of sexual inclinatio­n without the fear of persecutio­n or criminal prosecutio­n,” read the CJI’S judgement.

Pondering over whether the state can be allowed to draw the boundaries between permissibl­e and impermissi­ble intimacies between consenting adults, Justice DY Chandrachu­d in his judgement focused on what the meaning of the term “order of nature” is. Section 377 punished adults of the same sex indulging in unnatural sex that was against the order of nature.

“Homosexual­ity has been documented in almost 1500 species, who “unfortunat­ely are not blessed with rational capabiliti­es (and the propensity to ‘nurture’ same sex thoughts) as are found in mankind.” Denial of right to sexual orientatio­n, he said, is also denial of the right to privacy.

Justice RF Nariman referred to the privacy judgement and found fault with the 2013 Supreme Court verdict in the Suresh Kumar Koushal case that overturned a Delhi high court verdict decriminal­ising homosexual­ity.

He said equal protection demanded equal protection of the identity of every individual without discrimina­tion. The Mental Healthcare Act notified in 2017 was also quoted to point out that Parliament too was alive to privacy interests.

“This definition (under the Act) throws to the winds all misconcept­ions of mental illness including the fact that same sex couples who indulge in anal sex are persons with mental illness,” the judge said. Section 377 criminalis­es adult consensual sexual acts and this is not based on any sound or rational principle, said Justice Indu Malhotra. LGBT (Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r) activists gathered in protest across many cities across the world to protest against the Supreme Court decision that recriminal­ised homosexual­ity. Shortly afterwards, review petitions against the ruling were filed by Naz Foundation and the government but were quashed.

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