City
Epaper

Triple Talaq Bill needed for gender justice: Centre

By IANS | Updated: July 25, 2019 15:20 IST

Moving for consideration and passage, Union Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad on Thursday said that a contentious Bill that advocates three years jail for a husband who goes for Triple Talaq was needed to provide gender justice and equality.

Open in App

Citing the Supreme Court's 2017 verdict striking down the illegal practice and asking Parliament to bring a law over the issue, the Minister moved The Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Bill, 2019 to protect the rights of married Muslim women and to prohibit divorce by pronouncing talaq by their husbands.

Prasad said that women were being divorced by 'talaq-e-biddat'.

He said the Supreme Court had noted that 20 Islamic countries including Pakistan, Afghanistan, Malaysia, Indonesia, Jordan, Egypt and Tunisia had outlawed Triple Talaq.

And if they could do it, why cannot it be done in India which is a secular country, he asked.

"The Supreme Court has said that Triple Talaq is arbitrary and unconstitutional and asked Parliament to make a law. When we come up with a law, it is opposed. What should our Muslim women do in this situation?

"The question is what should be done in this situation. Should our Muslim sisters be left (in this situation)?"

He said the Indian Constitution's core philosophy was gender justice. "The Indian Constitution is equal for all daughters. So the Bill is needed."

The Minister said that three ordinances had so been promulgated as a similar Bill moved by the previous Modi government could not get parliamentary approval.

A fresh Bill was introduced by the new government in June.

Under the Bill, divorcing through instant Triple Talaq would be illegal, void and attract a jail term of three years for the husband.

Prasad rejected fears that the proposed law could be misused and asserted that certain safeguards had been put in it including provision for bail before trial.

While the Bill makes Triple Talaq a non-bailable offence, an accused can approach a Magistrate before trial to seek bail.

In a non-bailable offence, bail cannot be granted at the police station.

A provision has been added to allow the Magistrate to grant bail "after hearing the wife", the Minister said.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: indiaJordanmodiThe Supreme Court
Open in App

Related Stories

International‘This Might Hit You Hard’: NATO Chief Mark Rutte's Warning to India, China, and Brazil Over Russia Ties Amid Ukraine War

HealthUS Rice Contains Highest Arsenic Levels; Indian Basmati and Thai Jasmine Among Safest, Reveals New Study

Maharashtra"This is Betrayal": Former MP Calls Out Prada for Allegedly Copying Kolhapuri Chappal Design

InternationalWhen Will Russia Deliver More S-400 Missiles to India? Major Update Revealed - Here’s Why It Was Delayed

NationalIndia Extends Airspace Ban on Pakistan-Based Aircraft Till July 24

National Realted Stories

NationalFrom Pahalgam to Op Sindoor: INDIA bloc finalises common agenda to corner Centre in Parliament

NationalUP Shocker: School Van Driver Accused of Assaulting Four-year-old Girl in Lucknow

NationalStudents, teacher escape as plaster falls off ceiling in Bhopal school

NationalMP: Harda college sparks outrage over naming chicken breed after ‘Narmada’

NationalGST row: K'taka BJP launches helpline for protecting small traders' interests