The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Pak’s Hindu marriage bill inches closer to enactment

Allows to get marriages registered, divorced

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

THE MUCH-AWAITED bill to regulate marriages of minority Hindus in Pakistan moved closer to reality Monday after a Senate committee approved the landmark draft legislatio­n, nearly four months after it was passed by the National Assembly.

The Hindu Marriage Bill 2016 will become a law after it will be passed by the Senate, the upper house of the Parliament. The Senate Functional Committee on Human Rights unanimousl­y approved the muchawaite­d Hindu Marriages Bill.

Considered as a comprehens­ive and widely-acceptable family law for Hindus living in Pakistan, the bill will enable the Hindu community to get their marriages registered and to appeal in courts of law in cases of separation.

There are penalties for violating the provisions of the bill, which allows Hindus to finally have a proof of marriage document called the shadiparat, similar to the nikahnama for Muslims.

The bill also allows separated Hindu persons to remarry. Clause 17 of the bill states that a Hindu widow “shall have the right to re-marry of her own will and consent after the death of her husband provided a period of six months has lapsed after the husband’s death”.

The Dawn reported that soon after the bill was approved, the Committee Room 4 in Parliament House echoed with jubilation as senators and officials of different ministries started thumping their desks.

Minority member in National Assembly Ramesh Kumar Vankwani called the move a new year’s gift for Hindus living in Pakistan.

“Today, we are proud to be Hindu Pakistanis after the approval of the bill. Hindus will now be able to get registered their marriages and also apply for divorce under family laws,” he said.

Top constituti­onal expert Senator Aitzaz Ahsan said the bill is in accordance with the essence of the Constituti­on. After passing through the committee stage, the bill will be presented before the Senate where it is sure to win bipartisan support.

The bill will be applicable to all Pakistan minus Sindh province which last year separately adopted its own Hindu marriage law.

Hindus make up approximat­ely 1.6 per cent of Pakistan’s Muslim-majority 190 million population, but they have not had any legal mechanisms to register their marriages since independen­ce in 1947.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India