Govt to oppose nikah halala in SC
THE LEGAL VALIDITY OF NIKAH HALALA WILL BE EXAMINED BY THE SC AFTER ITS VACATION IS OVER. A CONSTITUTION BENCH WILL HEAR 4 PLEAS CHALLENGING THE PRACTICE.
NEW DELHI: The Centre will reaffirm before the Supreme Court its opposition to the Muslim practice of nikah halala on grounds that it is against the concept of gender justice and misused, a senior government functionary said Friday.
Nikah halala is a provision in Islamic law that allows a Muslim to remarry his divorced wife only after she marries another man and consummates the marriage with him. In August last year, the SC banned as unconstitutional instant triple talaq, a practice under which a Muslim man was allowed to divorce his wife by uttering the word “talaq” three times at one go. Shayara Bano, one of the petitioners in the case, had also challenged polygamy and nikah halala at that time, but the SC chose only to examine the practice of triple talaq.
The government had even at that time said in court that nikah halala was against the principles of gender justice. The top court said it would consider nikah halala and polygamy separately.
A fresh plea was filed in the Supreme Court in March to declare the practice of polygamy and nikah halala as unconstitutional. In April, the court asked the Centre to respond to a plea.
The legal validity of nikah halala will now be examined by the Supreme Court after the summer vacation. A Constitution Bench of the top court will hear four petitions challenging the legal validity of the practice.
“The stand is the same... the Union of India is opposed to the practice. It will be reflected in the Supreme Court,” the government functionary cited above said on condition of anonymity.
After the SC declared triple talaq illegal, the government introduced a bill to make it a penal offence. The bill, passed by the Lok Sabha, is pending in the Rajya Sabha. It makes instant triple talaq illegal and punishable with up to three years in jail for the husband.
Several opposition parties are opposed to the provision. “The matter is before Parliament. Debate is the only way out. If the opposition has any suggestion, it can make it on the floor of the house. It cannot be discussed on the streets,” minority affairs minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi said.