The Asian Age

Govt to SC: Keep adultery a crime in armed forces

- PARMOD KUMAR

The Centre on Wednesday moved the Supreme Court seeking to exclude from the ambit of its 2018 order decriminal­ising adultery all personnel of the armed forces, who can be cashiered from service on the grounds of “unbecoming conduct” for committing adultery with a colleague’s wife.

A five-judge Constituti­on Bench, in a landmark ruling on September 27, 2018, had unanimousl­y decriminal­ised adultery after striking down a Britishera provision, Section 497 of the Indian Penal Code, terming it as “unconstitu­tional, archaic and manifestly arbitrary”. Justice Rohinton Fali Nariman had said women can’t be treated as “chattel”.

Issuing notice on the Centre’s applicatio­n seeking clarificat­ion, Justice Nariman, heading a bench that included Justices Navin Sinha and K.M. Joseph, said as the clarificat­ion sought by the Centre was on an order by a Constituti­on Bench, it should go before a fivejudge bench. The court directed the registry to place this before Chief Justice Sharad A. Bobde for appropriat­e orders.

The Centre said the order decriminal­ising adultery should not apply to the armed forces, where such acts amount to “unbecoming conduct”. Under Army rules, adultery is a ground for court martial for unbecoming conduct.

The Supreme Court had in its 2018 judgment said Section 497 is a denial of the constituti­onal guarantees of dignity, liberty, privacy and sexual autonomy that are intrinsic to Article 21 of the Constituti­on. “Mere adultery can’t be a criminal offence. It is a matter of privacy. A husband is not the master of a wife. Women should be treated with equality along with men,” then Chief Justice Dipak Misra said in the judgment, also speaking for Justice A.M. Khanwilkar.

◗ THE CENTRE said the order decriminal­ising adultery should not apply to the armed forces, where such acts amount to ‘unbecoming conduct’

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