 Vidya Bhushan Rawat |
| Blog | Posted By: hindtodaynews on:6/8/2012 7:56:09 AM |
Reference: Shariah law in India - Delhi High Court allows Muslim girl to get married at the age of 15....more
Delhi High Court has held that a
marriage of minor (Muslim) is valid even if she is under age but has attained
puberty. A bench of Justice Ravindra
Bhatt and Justice S.P.Garg said that ‘according
to Mohamadan Law, a girl can marry without the consent of her parents once she
attains the age of puberty and she has the right to reside with her husband
even if she is below the age of 18.’ The
girl in question was 15 years of age and had married to a person of her choice.
Her parents filed a case in the Delhi High Court citing that the girl was minor
and parents were still the legal guardian of her. The court has rejected the
parent’s petition and allowed the girl to stay with her husband.
The judgment can be interpreted
in many ways including right to privacy and freedom of choice. The court has
respected girl’s right to choice. It has
accepted albeit indirectly that age for consensual sex could be below 18 if the
girl attained puberty. In other way, the judges suggest that a Muslim girl
attaining puberty can have consensual sex even if she is below 18 which is
legally defined age for consensual sex in our laws. It is clear that the court
have accepted the supremacy of the Personal Laws and used it to give protection
to the girl. Problem is that the same yard stick may not be applied to a girl
from other religion. What will happen if the lovers are from two different
religions and have gone for civil marriage and the age of the girl is 15. Will
the ‘consensual sex’ not become rape even if she has attained puberty?
The Parliament
has recently passed The Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012
which defines a child as any person below the age of 18 years and provides
protection to all children under the age of 18 years from the offences of
sexual assault, sexual harassment and pornography. Accordingly, the Act has
strengthened our resolve to fight against Child Sexual Abuse.
Punishments for Offences covered in the Act are:
· Penetrative
Sexual Assault (Section 3) – Not less
than seven years which may extend to imprisonment for life, and fine (Section
4)
· Aggravated
Penetrative Sexual Assault (Section 5) – Not less
than ten years which may extend to imprisonment for life, and fine (Section 6)
· Sexual
Assault (Section 7) – Not less than three years which may extend to five years,
and fine (Section 8)
· Aggravated
Sexual Assault (Section 9) – Not less
than five years which may extend to seven years, and fine (Section 10)
· Sexual
Harassment of the Child (Section 11) – Three years and fine (Section 12)
· Use of
Child for Pornographic Purposes (Section 13) – Five
years and fine and in the event of subsequent conviction, seven years and fine (Section 14 (1))
Now the question
is why the civil courts are using personal laws in their jurisdiction when
their duty is to interpret the constitutional laws. If we accept the supremacy
of our constitutional provisions then all other laws of the country including
personal laws, must be subordinate to our civil laws. And this must come
strongly in the judgments. Unfortunately, the Judges have been using these
religious moralities to explain or strengthen their arguments which seem to be
quite dangerous. The Court’s should not ignore
the historic judgment that Supreme Court had given in the Shabano case about 25
years back which virtually challenged the supremacy of the Muslim Personal Laws
which were adamant against a divorce woman getting any alimony. It is a
landmark judgment with an equally retrogressive move by Indian Parliament to
undo it when Rajiv Gandhi was compelled by the Muslim fundamentalists to do so.
According to them, no law of the land is above the Muslim Personal Law and
hence the government must respect these personal laws.
Over the years,
we have seen that Sharia Courts have been established in different parts of the
country which provide instant justice to Muslim families who go there. They are
primitive in nature and their judgments mostly are absurd to say the least.
These Sharia Courts give the clergy a leverage to control and direct the
community and decide about their fate. Deeply rooted in traditional prejudices,
these courts are openly anti women and have always justified their act in the
religious terms. Muslim women who are victim of these courts are now
challenging them and approaching the civil courts where they have often got
justice.
There is no
doubt that Delhi High Court has rescued the girl who might have married to her
lover out of her own choice. That that a teenage girl is capable of making her
choice related to her partner must be respected. It is also a fact that most of
the parents who are unhappy with their children’s love relationships actually
file cases of abduction and kidnapping on the boy. Most of the time, the police
use this tool brutally to exploit both the families. If the boys’ family is
unable to pay to the police then he is tortured and the family faces the wrath
of all. Hence, as a judgment it need to be respected but the point of danger is
that it is a communal judgment as it is applicable to one community only. The courts should not give judgments which
are communal in nature. Their judgments should be useful for all the citizens
of the country irrespective of their caste, color, religion and region as
people look forward to these judgments for their benefit. Unfortunately, the
Delhi High Court’s judgment is bound to create disharmony among people and will
strengthen the supremacy of religious values. It is the duty of the court to
encourage the values of the modern democratic traditions of equality, liberty
and fraternity on which our constitution has been founded. Our constitutional
provision and civil laws must supersede all the existing religious laws in the
country so that each one of its citizen get justice according to our modern
laws. It is the duty of the Court’s to see whether the interpretation of
religious texts violate of the constitutional provisions in our laws. The court
will have to stand up for our secular constitution which should be equal for
all. Our laws cannot be interpreted in different ways for different communities
particularly in an issue like sex and marriages. The Judgment will
virtually make Child Protection Act 2012 invalid for the Muslim Children in the
country who face a lot of victimization and sexual abuse like children for
other communities and need strong legal protection.
( The writer is a full-time Human Rights Activist )