A bench of Acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C Hari Shankar allowed the intervention application by Forum to Engage Men (FEM) and made it a party in the petitions seeking declaration of Section 375 (offence of rape) of the IPC as unconstitutional on the ground that it discriminated against married women being sexually assaulted by their husbands.
Marital rape (or spousal rape) is an act in which one of the spouses indulges in sexual intercourse without the consent of the other.
It said that marital rape was an exception in the law that took away the rights of the wives to say "no", as also their right to say "yes" to consensual sexual intercourse.
"Marriage is a partnership between equals. However, men have historically assumed privileges including the privilege of having sex at their instance. Most women have been conditioned to accept that.
"We believe that in Indian society, a wife will only bring about such a complaint against her husband when there is actual non-consent and she is desperate," it said.
It said that the members of the FEM believe that repeated sexual violence, even without physical violence, constitutes a grave human rights violation and should be treated as a crime.
The court has agreed to examine the issue raised in PILs by NGOs RIT Foundation, All India Democratic Women's Association and a man and a woman, who have sought striking down of the exception in the Indian penal law that did not consider sexual intercourse with a wife, not less than 15 years of age, as rape.
The counsel, in her written submissions given in the court, said that in England, US, Nepal, Australia, married women are entitled to the full range of individual civil liberties and human rights.
Senior advocate advocate Colin Gonsalves, appearing for a petitioner woman who was a victim of marital rape, argued that marriage cannot be viewed as giving a husband the right to coerced intercourse on demand.
The Centre, however, opposed the pleas and said marital rape cannot be made a criminal offence as it could become a phenomenon which may destabilise the institution of marriage and an easy tool for harassing the husbands.
The Centre, in an affidavit filed through central government standing counsel Monika Arora and Kushal Kumar, has said the Supreme Court and various High Courts have already observed the growing misuse of section 498A (harassment caused to a married woman by her husband and in-laws) of the IPC.
The court had earlier agreed to hear a plea by NGO Men Welfare Trust, representing men victimised by alleged misuse of gender laws, opposing the petitions to make marital rape a criminal offence.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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