Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Share marriage data with Centre, states told

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: States would have to share with the Centre the data of all registered marriages, a panel of ministers decided on Monday, a move aimed at addressing complaints of NRI husbands deserting their wives.

As more and more Indians go abroad for education, work and on business, complaints of domestic violence, dowry harassment and mistreatme­nt at the hands of non-resident Indian husbands, too, have grown.

“We will be writing to the states asking them to link the marriage registrati­on data to the women and child developmen­t (WCD) website at the end of every month,” minister Maneka Gandhi told Hindustan Times.

States are required to register marriages but in the absence of a central law, many tend to be lax. The move, said sources, would equip the ministry better to address the women’s problems which it can’t in the absence of informatio­n.

The National Commission for Women (NCW), an autonomous body under t he ministry, received 346 complaints against

NRI husbands in 2014, the latest year for which data is available.

The ministry would also be the nodal agency to monitor marriages and complaints involving NRIS. The inter-ministeria­l group comprising women and child developmen­t minister Maneka Gandhi, external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj, her junior minister VK Singh, and law minister Ravi Shankar Prasad met for the first time on Monday.

The group, which has to come up with a legal framework to address the complaints of NRI wives, discussed the recommenda­tions of a panel headed by retired judge Arvind Kumar Goel, a former chairman of Punjab’s state commission for NRIS.

As reported by Hindustan Times, the Goel panel has called for confiscati­ng or cancelling the passports of NRIS who harass wives for dowry, abuse them or and desert them.

Men disappeari­ng after marrying women in India, abandoning their wives in foreign countries and confiscati­ng their passports to prevent them from travel are the most common of complaints.

The report submitted in September also recommende­d that the offence of domestic violence be included in the scope of extraditio­n treaties that India has with other countries. “It will take time to implement many of these recommenda­tions as they require cabinet approval,” a ministry official said. As an immediate step, the ministry would ask registrars to share marriage data, the source said.

Registrars are state government officials who are responsibl­e for registerin­g a marriage and issuing a certificat­e.

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