Khaleej Times

No third-party interferen­ce when 2 adults marry, says SC

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new delhi — In an unequivoca­l message that khap panchayats can’t act as the society’s “conscience-keepers”, the Supreme Court on Monday said that when two adults marry, no one can interfere with or disturb them.

“Nobody should disturb them. Nobody should try to create any kind of fear. In a marriage, no third party can have any say,” said the bench of Chief Justice Dipak Misra, Justice A.M. Khanwilkar and Justice D.Y. Chandrachu­d, telling the khap panchayats not to become self-appointed conscience-keepers.

“Whether it is parents, society or anyone, they are out of it. No one, either individual or collective, or group, has the right to interfere with the marriage,” Chief Justice Misra said.

The strong observatio­n from the court came as counsel defending the role of Khap Panchayat told the court that they were not opposed to inter-caste or interrelig­ious marriages but were advancing the centuries-old tradition prohibitin­g marriages within the ‘sapinda’ or ‘gotra’ (lineage).

The court was told that the khaps were strongly opposed to honour killings. But Misra told the counsel said that if something was illegal or prohibited under law, then the law and the court will take care of it and not the khap panchayat. “Don’t be a conscience-keeper,” Chief Justice Misra said as counsel said that the khap panchayats are a “conscience-keeper”. —

Whether it is parents, society or anyone, they are out of it. No one, either individual or collective, or group, has the right to interfere with the marriage.

Chief Justice Dipak Misra

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