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Showing posts with the label KERALA HIGH COURT

EVOLUTION OF THE RIGHT TO PRIVACY AND EXPLAINING THE NATIONAL SECURITY IMPLICATIONS OF THE SAME

  INTRODUCTION The term ‘Privacy’ has a multi-faced connotation and is much complex a problem to be reduced to a single essence. Privacy is the right to be let alone, the right to be free from unwarranted public intervention. [1] The concept of privacy was inextricably linked with that of house or property sanctity in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. [2] The Right to Privacy has received considerable attention recently, since it is being considered as an important component of the fundamental right of 'right to life and personal liberty' under Article 21 of the Constitution, together with the freedoms granted by Part III. There has almost been an evolution of the subject as a result of various landmark decisions made over time by the Indian Judiciary. However, since fundamental rights are not absolute in nature [3] , it is necessary to understand that the infringement of Right to Privacy is justified by a compelling state interest [4] . Any topic of publi...

Marital Rape: A Nation’s Indecisiveness on Criminalizing a Human Atrocity

Recently in a landmark judgement, a division bench of the Kerala High Court stated that marital rape is a ground for Divorce. While there is a provision in the Indian Penal Code (IPC), punishing “Sexual Intercourse by husband upon his wife during separation”, there is no provision for marital rape. The exception 2 of the Section 375 (which defines rape) of the IPC states that sexual intercourse or sexual acts by a man to his wife is not rape given the wife is not under 15 (now 18 [ 1 ] ) years of age is rape. Although all of the marriage laws in India recognize cruelty as a ground of divorce in India, it is only now that marital rape too has been recognized as a ground for the same. While marital rape is lawfully recognized as an offence in most of the nations, Indian laws remains obsolete. There have been several discussions regarding the recognition of Marital rape in India, a written reply by Minister of State for Home Affairs, Shri Haribhai Parathibhai Chaudhary to another Rajya ...

‘Lawful’ rape and the Exception in Indian Penal Code

  (Editor’s note: Trigger Warning for Paragraph 3: Mention of Rape) On July 30, 2021, a two-judge bench of the Kerala High Court delivered an exemplary judgment [ 1 ] recognising marital rape as a valid ground for divorce. The judgment was perceived to be significant for acknowledging the autonomy and agency of a woman in marriage. The court said, “a husband's licentious disposition disregarding the autonomy of the wife is a marital rape, albeit such conduct cannot be penalised, it falls in the frame of physical and mental cruelty.” It also opined that the law needs to be evolved in a manner where human problems are dealt with humanely. The court was hearing an appeal petition for divorce on the ground of cruelty and dismissal of a petition for restitution of conjugal rights. The couple had an arranged marriage in 1995 and have two children. The husband is a qualified doctor but never practised, rather engaged in real estate business and construction. The family court had ruled...