News India Triple talaq: Constitution bench to decide on petitions, says SC; Centre submits issues

Triple talaq: Constitution bench to decide on petitions, says SC; Centre submits issues

The Supreme Court has decided to set up a five-judge Constitution bench to hear and decide on a batch of petitions relating to the practices of triple talaq.

Constitution bench to decide on Triple talaq petitions Image Source : PTIConstitution bench to decide on Triple talaq petitions

The Supreme Court has decided to set up a five-judge Constitution bench to hear and decide on a batch of petitions relating to the practices of triple talaq, 'nikah halala' and polygamy among Muslims.  

A bench headed by Chief Justice JS Khehar took on record three sets of issues framed by parties with regard to the cases and said the questions for consideration of the constitution bench would be decided on March 30.  

The bench, also comprising Justices NV Ramana and DV Chandrachud, said "the issues are very important. These issues cannot be scuttled".  

Referring to the legal issues framed by the Centre, it said all of them relate to the constitutional issues and needed to be dealt by a larger bench.  

The bench asked the parties concerned to file their respective written submissions, running not beyond 15 pages, by the next date of hearing (March 30), besides the common paper book of case laws to be relied upon by them during the hearing to avoid duplicity. 

When a woman lawyer referred to the fate of the apex court judgement in the famous Shah Bano case, the bench said "there are always two sides in a case. We have been deciding cases for last 40 years. We have to go by the law and we would not go beyond the law." 

The bench also made it clear that it is willing to sit on Saturdays and Sundays to decide on the issue as it was very important. 

During the last hearing, the apex court had said it would decide the issues pertaining to 'legal' aspects of the practices of triple talaq, 'nikah halala' and polygamy among Muslims but not deal with the question whether divorce under Muslim law needs to be supervised by courts as it fell under the legislative domain. 

'Nikah halala' means a man cannot remarry a woman after talaq unless she has already consummated her marriage with another man and then her new husband dies or divorces her. 

The bench headed by the CJI had said "You (lawyers for parties) sit together and finalise the issues to be deliberated upon by us." 

The bench had made it clear to the parties concerned that it would not deal with the factual aspects of the particular case and would rather decide the legal issue. 

The apex court had said that the question whether divorce under Muslim Personal Law needed to be supervised by either courts or by a court-supervised institutional arbitration fell under the legislative domain. 

It, however, allowed lawyers to file small synopsis of cases pertaining to alleged victims of triple talaq. 

The Centre had earlier opposed the practice of triple talaq, 'nikah halala' and polygamy among Muslims and favoured a relook on grounds like gender equality and secularism. 

The Ministry of Law and Justice, in its affidavit before the Supreme Court, referred to constitutional principles such as gender equality, secularism, international covenants, religious practices and marital law prevalent in various Islamic countries to drive home the point that the practice of triple talaq and polygamy needed to be adjudicated upon afresh by the apex court.

”It is submitted that the issue of validity of triple talaq, nikah halala and polygamy needs to be considered in the light of principles of gender justice and the overriding principle of non-discrimination, dignity and equality,” the affidavit filed by Mukulita Vijayawargiya, additional secretary in the ministry, said.

Responding to a batch of petitions including the one filed by Shayaro Bano challenging the validity of such practices among Muslims, the Centre first dealt with the right of gender equality under the Constitution.

All India Muslim Personal Law Board, however, had rubbished the stand taken by the Narendra Modi government that the apex court should re-look these practices as they are violative of fundamental rights like gender equality and the ethos of secularism, a key part of the basic structure of the Constitution. 

Another prominent Islamic organisation Jamiat Ulema-i-Hind had told the court there is no scope for interference with the Muslim Personal Law in which triple talaq, 'nikah halala' and polygamy are well rooted and stand on much higher pedestal as compared to other customs.

Centre submits issues in SC, questions practice of triple talaq 

Meanwhile, the Centre submitted in the Supreme Court a list of issues for adjudication including the question whether fundamental right to practice and propagate one's religion protected the practice of triple talaq, 'nikah halala' and polygamy among Muslims. 

 

Here are the four questions submitted by the Centre:

1- Whether the practices of triple talaq, 'nikah halala' and polygamy are protected under Article 25(1) of the Constitution. 

The Article says: "Subject to public order, morality and health and to the other provisions of this Part, all persons are equally entitled to freedom of conscience and the right freely to profess, practice and propagate religion." 

2- Whether the right to practice and propagate religion is subject to other equally important rights, that is right to equality (Article 14) and right to life (Article 21) of the Constitution. 

3- Whether the Muslim personal law amenable to the provision of Article 13 of the Constitution which provides that any law is void if it is not in conformity of the constitutional scheme and framed the issue.  

4- Whether these practices are compatible with India's obligations under international treaties and covenants to which nation is a signatory. 

The NDA government has, for the first time in India's constitutional history, opposed in the top court such prevalent practices among Muslims on grounds like gender equality, secularism and binding international covenants. 

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