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Govt takes ordinance route to ban instant triple talaq

Addressing the media soon after the Union Cabinet cleared the ordinance, Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad cited compelling necessity for the move as the practice annulled by the Supreme Court continues unabated. 

The Union cabinet on Wednesday cleared an ordinance to make the practice of instant triple talaq a penal offence.

The moves comes in the wake of the government’s inability to get the ‘Muslim Women Protection of Rights on Marriage Bill’, which was cleared by the Lok Sabha, approved by the Rajya Sabha where it lacks the necessary numbers. 

The Supreme Court last year banned the practice of instant triple talaq. But since the practice was still prevalent, a bill was brought to make it a penal offence. 

Addressing the media soon after the Union Cabinet cleared the ordinance, Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad cited compelling necessity for the move as the practice annulled by the Supreme Court continues unabated. 

He also accused the Congress party of not cooperating in the passage of the Muslim Women Protection of Rights on Marriage Bill, pending in the Rajya Sabha, because of vote bank politics. 

Citing details of the ordinance, he said a woman or her blood relative will have to file a case before a police station to make the offence cognisable. 

The offence is compoundable, and provides for a compromise to be reached before a magistrate after the affected woman consents to it, he said.

“It is my serious charge that despite having a woman leading the Congress, they did not lend support to the bill,” he told reporters. 

Describing the practice as “barbaric and inhuman”, he said nearly 22 countries have regulated triple talaq. However, gender justice was given a complete go-by in a secular country like India because of blatant vote bank politics. 

“I will again appeal to Soniaji that this ordinance has been brought in the interest of the country to bring gender justice. I appeal to you to rise above vote bank politics and help pass it in the interest of justice for women,” he told reporters after the Cabinet meeting. 

The Union minister also appealed to Bahujan Samaj Party leader Mayawati and Trinamool Congress leader Mamata Banerjee to help in the passage of the bill pending in Rajya Sabha, where the government lacks numbers. The Lok Sabha has already passed the bill. 

The Supreme Court last year banned the practice. But since the practice was still prevalent, a bill was brought to make it a penal offence. 

Image used only for representational purpose.

Source: Rediff