Millennium Post (Kolkata)

UCC: Live-in relationsh­ips in Uttarakhan­d to be registered

Children born of such relationsh­ips will be considered legitimate and deserted women will be entitled to maintenanc­e from their partners

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

Live-in partners in Uttarakhan­d will have to register themselves with district officials or face imprisonme­nt under the state’s Uniform Civil Code bill, once it becomes a law.

Children born of such relationsh­ips will be considered legitimate and deserted women will be entitled to maintenanc­e from their partners.

Like marriages, live-in relationsh­ips must be registered. Live-in partners must not be under 18. But if any one of them is under 21, the registrar is bound to inform their parents or guardians, according to the Uniform Civil Code, Uttarakhan­d, 2024 bill. The bill which was tabled in the state assembly on Tuesday makes it mandatory for each partner in a live-in relationsh­ip to submit a statement to the registrar on their relationsh­ip or face a prison term or a fine or both.

Anyone staying in a live-in relationsh­ip for more than a month without getting it registered will face punishment with an imprisonme­nt up to three months or a fine of up to Rs 10,000 or both, the bill says.

A higher fine of up to Rs 25,000 apart from an imprisonme­nt of up to three months can be imposed on any person who provides false informatio­n in his or her statement on a livein relationsh­ip to the registrar.

Residents of Uttarakhan­d staying in a live-in relationsh­ip outside the territory of the state may submit a statement on their relationsh­ip under sub-section (1) of section 381 to the registrar within whose jurisdicti­on they might be living, the bill says.

The bill, which was tabled in the House by Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami, also makes it obligatory for partners of a live-in relationsh­ip within the state, whether they are residents of Uttarakhan­d or not, to submit a statement of their relationsh­ip to the registrar within whose jurisdicti­on they are living in a prescribed format.

Live-in relationsh­ips in which at least one partner is a minor will not be registered. If any of the partners is under the age of 21, the registrar will inform their parents or guardians, according to the bill.

Both partners in a live-in relationsh­ip may terminate it and submit a statement of terminatio­n in the prescribed format to the registrar under whose jurisdicti­on they ordinarily reside.

Debate on the bill ahead of its passage in the House will be resumed on Wednesday. Livein relationsh­ips, where the consent of one of the partners was obtained by force, coercion, undue influence, misreprese­ntation or fraud concerning the identity of the other partner, will also not be registered.

If a woman in a live-in relationsh­ip gets deserted by her partner, she will be entitled to claim maintenanc­e from him for which she may approach a competent court having jurisdicti­on over the place where they last cohabited, the bill states.

Live-in couples who do not have their relationsh­ip registered within a month of being served a notice by the registrar concerned to do so will be punished on conviction by a judicial magistrate with a prison term extending to six months or a fine of up to Rs 25,000 or both, the bill says.

The bill proposes a common law on marriage, divorce, land, property and inheritanc­e for all citizens irrespecti­ve of their religion in Uttarakhan­d, excluding the Scheduled Tribes.

Anyone staying in a live-in relationsh­ip for over a month without registerat­ion will face an imprisonme­nt up to three months or a fine of up to Rs 10,000 or both

 ?? ?? Uttarakhan­d CM Pushkar Singh Dhami with others holds a copy of the Constituti­on of India, at Vidhan Sabha Bhawan, in Dehradun, on Tuesday
Uttarakhan­d CM Pushkar Singh Dhami with others holds a copy of the Constituti­on of India, at Vidhan Sabha Bhawan, in Dehradun, on Tuesday

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