City
Epaper

'How to grant social benefits to same-sex couples', SC asks Centre

By IANS | Updated: April 27, 2023 16:45 IST

New Delhi, April 27 The Supreme Court on Thursday asked the Centre to find a way to give ...

Open in App

New Delhi, April 27 The Supreme Court on Thursday asked the Centre to find a way to give same-sex couples basic social benefits, like joint bank accounts or nominating a partner in insurance policies, even without legal recognition of their marital status.

A five-judge bench headed by Chief Justice of India D.Y. Chandrachud observed that when court says recognition it need not be recognition as marriage, it may mean recognition which entitles them to certain benefits, and the association of two people need not be equated to marriage. The apex court appeared to accept that legal sanction for same-sex marriage is under Parliament's domain.

The bench told Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, representing the Centre, that once you say that right to cohabit is a fundamental right, then it is the obligation of the state that all social impact of the cohabitation has a legal recognition, and court is not going into marriage at all.

The Chief Justice said the court wants some element of a broad sense of coalition and the court is also conscious about the fact that there is so much that representative democracy should also achieve in the country. The bench said there will be social requirements such as banking, insurance, admissions, etc where the Centre will have to do something.

Mehta said the government may consider tackling some of the issues, same-sex couples are facing without granting the legal recognition.

The top court asked Centre to come back on May 3, with its response on social benefits that same-sex couples could be granted even without legal recognition of their marital status.

The Chief Justice told Mehta, "We take your point that if we enter this arena...you have made a very powerful argument that you'll be legislating...and this is for the Parliament, this will be an arena of the legislature... So, now what?" The bench queried what does the government want to do with cohabited relations?

The bench further queried Mehta, how a sense of security and social welfare is made? And also ensure that such relations are not ostracised in the society.

The top court is hearing a batch of pleas seeking legal sanction for same-sex marriages.


ss/uk/

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: indiaparliamentNew DelhiTushar MehtaSupreme CourtThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-westIndiUk-indiaRepublic of india
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUS Government Shutdown: US Embassy in India’s X Account to Pause Regular Updates Until Full Operations Resume

CricketIND vs PAK 2025 Live Streaming: Head-to-Head Record, When and Where to Watch India vs Pakistan Asia Cup Final

BusinessVodafone Idea Share Price Falls as Supreme Court Postpones AGR Dues Hearing to Oct 6

BusinessVodafone Idea Share Price Falls By 6% Ahead of Supreme Court Hearing On Rs, 9450 Crore AGR Dues

NationalDelhi Metro Tragedy: Woman Falls or Jumps From Supreme Court Station; Investigation Underway

National Realted Stories

NationalCM Bhupendra Patel releases 'Gujarat Diwali Special Issue' of Vikram Samvat 2081

NationalPM Modi launches Rs 62,000 crore youth-focused initiatives, highlights Bihar’s role

NationalRG Kar rape victim's parents dismiss NCRB report calling Kolkata 'safest city'

NationalUK Prime Minister Starmer to visit India next week, hold talks with PM Modi in Mumbai

NationalBangladesh Army Chief unlikely to visit India for UN troop contributor chiefs' conclave