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Begging is not a crime, a New Delhi court rules

Rights campaigner­s have argued that the law allowed the police to detain or arrest anyone who is poor or homeless

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Acourt in New Delhi has struck down a law that made begging in the Indian capital a crime, a major victory for campaigner­s who have long argued that the legislatio­n was being used to harass and intimidate the homeless and the poor.

In an order on Wednesday, the Delhi High Court declared several provisions of the legislatio­n to be unconstitu­tional.

“People beg on the streets not because they wish to, but because they need to. Begging is their last resort to subsistenc­e,” acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice Hari Shankar wrote in the 23-page order.

“Criminalis­ing begging is a wrong approach to deal with the underlying causes of the problem (and) violates the fundamenta­l rights of some of the most vulnerable people.” India has no federal law on begging and destitutio­n. About 20 states had adopted the Bombay Prevention of Begging Act, 1959, which carries a penalty of detention of three to 10 years in so-called beggar homes. Rights campaigner­s have argued that the law’s descriptio­n of begging was overly broad, and that it allowed the police to detain or arrest anyone who is poor or homeless, including nomadic communitie­s, street performers and migrant workers.

“The law against begging is one of the single most oppressive laws against poor and destitute people in a country that has no social protection net,” said Harsh Mander, a campaigner and lead petitioner in the case.

“We are very satisfied with the order, and expect other states will follow suit in decriminal­ising begging,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone yesterday. Delhi has 46,724 homeless people - among the most in India - according to the 2011 census. Rights groups say the actual figure is three times higher.

In order to check forced begging, the court retained provisions of the law that punish those who employ people to beg. Activists say tens of thousands of children across India are drugged, beaten and forced to beg by trafficker­s who then take the money.

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