The Asian Age

Cong says it will scrap talaq law, faces BJP flak

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Bringing back memories of the mid- 1980s Shah Bano case, when the Rajiv Gandhi government was accused of failing Muslim women, Congress women’s wing chief Sushmita Dev declared on Thursday that the party would scrap the new triple talaq law if it was voted to power.

“A lot of people told us that women will be empowered if the Triple Talaq Bill is passed. But we opposed that law because it is a weapon Narendra Modiji has prepared to put Muslim men in jail and make them stand in police stations,” Ms Dev said.

Addressing the Congress’ minority wing convention here, the Congress MP from Silchar alleged that Prime Minister Modi had created an atmosphere where Muslim women were being pitted against Muslim men through the triple talaq law. Claiming that Muslim women from all parts of the country had written “crores of letters, carrying out signature campaigns and rebelling against” the law, she said: “The Congress Party stood up and opposed it in

We opposed that law because it is a weapon Narendra Modiji has prepared to put Muslim men in jail and make them stand in police stations — Sushmita Dev, Cong women’s wing chief

Parliament. I promise you that the Congress government will come in 2019 and we will scrap this law. But it is also certain that whatever law is brought for women’s empowermen­t, by whichever government, the Congress will support it.”

Attacking the Congress and its president Rahul Gandhi for its appeasemen­t politics, the BJP on Thursday accused it of having no regard for the Supreme Court, and also hit out at Mr Gandhi for using “inappropri­ate words” against Mr Modi, saying it showed the Congress president’s “mentality and nervousnes­s”.

Launching a scathing attack on the PM, the Congress president had

■ Continued from Page 1 called him a “darpok” ( coward), and dared him to a five- minute face- to- face debate on issues like Rafale and national security. He also said the RSS was trying to capture the country’s institutio­ns and said that his party’s government­s in Rajasthan, MP and Chhattisga­rh would remove the Sangh’s loyalists from the system.

It may be recalled that Shah Bano was a controvers­ial maintenanc­e lawsuit in which the top court delivered an order favouring maintenanc­e given to an aggrieved divorced Muslim woman. The then Congress government, led by Rajiv Gan- dhi, gave into the pressure of Muslim orthodoxy and enacted a law with its most controvers­ial aspect being the right to maintenanc­e for the period of iddat after the divorce, and shifting the onus of maintainin­g her to her relatives or the waqf board.

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