Khaleej Times

India makes ‘triple talaq’ punishable

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new delhi — The Indian government on Wednesday issued an executive order making the Islamic practice of “instant divorce” a criminal offence punishable by up to three years in prison.

The controvers­ial move brings an outright ban on “triple talaq” — when a Muslim man ends his marriage by saying “talaq” (“you are divorced” in Arabic) three times in succession — a step closer.

Muslim women say they have been divorced over messaging apps like WhatsApp or in letters, leaving them without any legal remedy.

India’s lower house passed legislatio­n outlawing the practice in December.

But it got stuck in the upper house, prompting the government to issue Wednesday’s executive order. It now needs only approval from the president to become law. “There was a constituti­onal urgency to bring this law. The curse of triple talaq has continued unabated,” Ravi Shankar Prasad, law and justice minister, told reporters. —

new delhi — Ahead of Assembly elections in five states, the Union Cabinet on Wednesday approved an ordinance making triple talaq a criminal offence, with the government stating that there was a “compelling necessity” and “overpoweri­ng urgency” to do so.

The ordinance, which will be sent to the President for approval, comes against the backdrop of the government’s inability to get a bill on the issue passed in the last monsoon session of Parliament.

The government then brought some changes in the original bill providing for only the women or their blood relations to file complaints against the erring husbands in a bid to get support from the Congress and other parties in the Rajya Sabha but did not succeeded in passing it.

Briefing reporters after a meeting of the union cabinet on why it was resorting to an ordinance, Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said that instances of instant triple talaq have “continued unabated” in spite of the Supreme Court declaring it

unconstitu­tional and Lok Sabha passing a bill that is now pending in the Rajya Sabha. He attacked the Congress and said it had not supported the bill in the Rajya Sabha due to “vote bank politics”.

Prasad said the issue pertained to respect for women and not to religion or path of worship.

“The issue of triple talaq has nothing to do with faith, mode of worship. It is pure issue of gender justice and gender equality.”

He said triple talaq was still being given on flimsy grounds such as chappapti getting burnt and wife waking up late. There were instances of the instant divorce having being given on social media platform WhatsApp, he said. “Women are being oppressed, they are suffering. Most instances are taking place in Uttar Pradesh,” he said.

Giving out figures of triple talaq cases between January 2017 and September 2018 from several states that totalled 430 including 229 before the Supreme Court judgement and 201 later, he said there could be many other unreported cases. “The bottomline is that cases of triple talaq continue unabated. Whatever we have collected is shocking,” he said.

Prasad said several Islamic countries have banned instant triple talaq but it still prevailed in a secular country like India.

He said the offence will become cognizable (with provision of three years imprisonme­nt) if the FIR is filed by the woman or by her blood relations. A compromise can be reached at the initiative of woman and with appropriat­e conditions imposed by the magistrate concerned.

Prasad also said that bail can be given by the magistrate after hearing the woman who has filed the case. The custody of minor children will go to the mother and she will be entitled to maintenanc­e for herself and her minor children.

He said the purpose was not to break families and a compromise will have the court’s seal. —

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