Eastern Eye (UK)

India’s top court accepts plea seeking to legalise same-sex marriages

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INDIA’S top court decided last Friday (25) to proceed with a case weighing legal recognitio­n of same-sex marriages, four years after the same institutio­n struck down a colonial-era ban on gay sex.

The case, brought by a gay couple who informally exchanged vows last year, could pave the way for India to become the second jurisdicti­on in Asia to recognise same-sex marriage after Taiwan.

Petitioner­s Abhay Dange and Supriyo Chakrabort­y told the New Indian Express newspaper after their wedding ceremony that they hoped “to live in a world with no closets”. They are now asking the Supreme Court for the same marital rights as straight couples.

A bench led by chief justice

Dhananjaya Chandrachu­d asked the government to file its response within a month.

Prime minister Narendra Modi’s administra­tion has resisted previous attempts to formally recognise same-sex relationsh­ips in lower courts.

Last year, the government told the Delhi high court that samesex marriages would “cause complete havoc with the delicate balance of personal laws in the country”.

Last Friday’s Supreme Court decision to allow the case to proceed comes after significan­t rulings on sexual and family issues in recent years, including the decriminal­isation of adultery and extending India’s already broad abortion rights.

In 2018, the court struck down a statute introduced by the British

more than 150 years earlier that criminalis­ed gay sex and threatened participan­ts in consensual same-sex relationsh­ips with up to a decade in prison.

The law was rarely enforced, but critics said it was routinely used to harass and intimidate India’s gay community.

Its repeal saw jubilant celebratio­ns by LGBTQ Indians across the country and a raucous atmosphere at the annual Pride march in the capital New Delhi later that year.

LGBTQ Indians still risk being shunned by their families and harassed by the public, but there have been signs of a shift in attitudes among the country’s urban middle classes. Several public figures have come out in recent years including star sprinter Dutee Chand.

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