"I am happy that the court has referred the matter to a five-judge bench. Now, the court is going to look at the constitutional arguments to decriminalise homosexuality, hopes have been raised that if the petition has been accepted that means they see some merit in it. Let's hope this is the last leg of the fight," said LBGT activist and Naz Foundation Director Anjali Gopalan.
The apex court today referred the curative plea seeking re-examination of its verdict criminalising homosexuality under section 377 IPC, to a 5-judge Constitution Bench.
The court was hearing the curative petition filed by gay rights activists and NGO Naz Foundation against the apex court's December 11, 2013 judgement upholding validity of section 377 (unnatural sexual offences) of IPC and the January 2014 order by which it had dismissed a batch of review petitions.
"We have always been told whom you want to love is a matter of choice and that personal choice must be respected by the society at large. Sec 377 as far as LGBT community is concerned needs to be decriminalised. Delhi High Court judgement was a welcome step in this direction that was reversed," he said.
Noted lyricist Javed Akhtar said homosexual relationships are a reality and the society needs to accept that.
Reacting to the development, Bollywood actress Nandita Das, said, "it is an archaic law which was introduced by the British government. They have removed this law from their judiciary and we are still hanging to it. I really hope that this law will go and people will be allowed to love."
"We should be worried about people like Dabholkar, Kalburgi being killed for being rationalist instead of saying two people cannot love. So, I am definitely against 377 and I really hope that better sense will prevail," she added.
"The Supreme Court's decision on Section 377 is a positive development. The apex court has another chance to correct a grave error, which continues to put LGBT people under physical, mental and legal threat," it said in a statement.
