|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, October 06, 2001 |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
Opinion
| Previous
| Next
A humane reading
LAST WEEK'S RULING by a Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court -
and earlier by lower courts in different parts of the country in
recent years - affirming divorced Muslim women's right to
maintenance for the rest of their lives unless they remarry,
marks a welcome departure from the regressive pressures
experienced by this community in the mid-1980s on the question of
alimony. The S.C.'s interpretation, upholding the validity of the
Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act of 1986
should, however, be viewed as a judicial fiat intended to
foreclose any scope to reopen the painful controversy that ensued
after its verdict in the sensational Shah Bano case in 1985.
Towards that end, the S.C. applied an imaginative interpretation,
bringing the whole question of alimony under the right to life
under Article 21 of the Constitution. The law that governed all
the different communities until a separate act was passed for
Muslims in 1986 was the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) of
1973. It guaranteed under Section 125 payment of maintenance for
divorced women who had no means of sustenance. But consequent
upon the Shah Bano case, the Muslim Women's Act provided for
maintenance for divorced women in that community only for the
three-month period of iddat commencing with the date of the
pronouncement of divorce. If the S.C. has, notwithstanding the
1986 Act, arrived at the judgment upholding the right to
maintenance, this is by reading into the latter the substance of
Section 125 of the CrPC.
It is significant to note that in the Shah Bano case, as well as
in several previous and subsequent instances, the Judiciary has
upheld the right to maintenance of divorced Muslim women. It did
so by invoking the spirit of the Constitutional provisions, where
minority rights are not viewed necessarily in conflictual terms
with the personal laws of different communities, the Directive
Principle of State Policy (Article 44), besides the provisions of
the CrPC. If, however, the Shah Bano case was made out to be, as
it were, a bolt from the blue, it was on account of the
increasing communalisation of the polity that took its toll on
the national arena right through the 1980s. The political and
legislative history pertaining to the 1986 Act was likewise an
instance of the liberal wing in the political spectrum yielding
ground to religious extremism for short-term and opportunistic
gains.
The broader implications from last week's ruling are clearly in
the nature of the affirmation of the centrality of Constitutional
values. Therefore, the Judiciary should perhaps discourage the
tendency to seek recourse to the judicial route to resolve
disputes that are essentially in the domain of political culture
and political values. There is no gainsaying the need, however,
for judicial firmness when called upon to adjudge contentious
questions of a historical and philosophical nature. The S.C.'s
verdict a few years back on the essence of ``Hindutva'' as no
more than ``a way of life'' was in stark contrast to such a
predisposition. For the judgment abstracted from the wide
currency and real import of the phraeseology of Hindutva as it
obtained then, whereas, the S.C.'s role could not have been more
critical in the political climate vitiated by the ascendancy of
majoritarianism and the selective targeting of various minority
communities. It is not surprising that this judgment is in fact
often quoted by ideologues of the Sangh Parivar in their favour.
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : Opinion Previous : Osama and the deeds of mass terror Next : Learning to forget | |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyright © 2001 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|