The Free Press Journal

Woman wants to be with her husband

- AGENCIES

Kerala woman Hadiya, who has to depose before Supreme Court on November 27 in an alleged 'love jihad' case, on Saturday said that she wanted to be with her husband, as she was whisked away by her parents and security personnel to board a flight to Delhi. Chaotic scenes prevailed as media-persons, who tried to approach her, jostled with the policemen after she reached the airport in Nedumbasse­ry amid tight security. "I am a Muslim. I was not forced. I want to be with my husband," the 25-year-old woman, wearing a headscarf, shouted as she was being taken inside the airport.

Earlier, the woman, who converted to Islam and married a Muslim man Shafin Jahan, and her parents left from their house in a village near Vaikom in this district, accompanie­d by a police team which also comprised women personnel, for a two-hour long journey to the airport.

The direction by the apex court for producing the woman for an interactio­n came amid an assertion by the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) that this was a case in which the woman was indoctrina­ted and she may be incapable of giving free consent to marriage.

A Supreme Court bench, comprising Chief Justice Dipak Misra and Justices AM Khanwilkar and DY Chandrachu­d, had asked senior advocate Shyam Divan, representi­ng the father of the woman, to ensure she is produced before them to ascertain whether she had married of her own volition.

"I am a Muslim. I was not forced. I want to be with my husband," the woman shouted as she was being taken inside the airport.

The woman and her parents are likely to stay at Kerala House in New Delhi, sources said.

The NIA, represente­d by Additional Solicitor General Maninder Singh, had said there was a well-oiled machinery working in Kerala that was indoctrina­ting and radicalisi­ng society in the state. As many as 89 cases of similar nature have been reported from the southern state, the ASG had said.

Divan, appearing for woman's father K M Ashokan, claimed that Jahan was a radicalise­d man and several organisati­ons like Popular Front of India were involved in radicalisa­tion of society.

Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, counsel for Shafin Jahan,had opposed NIA's submission and that of the woman's father. Hadiya, a Hindu, had converted to Islam and later married Jahan. It was alleged that she was recruited by ISIS' mission in Syria and Jahan was only a stooge.

Jahan had on September 20 approached the apex court seeking recall of its August 16 order, directing the NIA to investigat­e the controvers­ial case of conversion and marriage of a Hindu woman with him.

Meanwhile, the Kerala government on October 7 told the Supreme Court that its police conducted a "thorough investigat­ion" into her conversion and subsequent marriage to Jahan and did not find material warranting the transfer of probe to the National Investigat­ion Agency.

Jahan had moved the Supreme Court after the Kerala high court annulled his marriage, saying it was an insult to the independen­ce of women in the country.

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