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Wider Concerns of Sec 377

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July 16, 2018

What is the issue?

  • On a petition relating to the LGBTQI community, the Supreme Court’s stance seems to be narrow.
  • It calls for expanding the SC’s considerations to acknowledge the wider concerns of Sec 377.

What is the recent development?

  • The Supreme Court is hearing a curative petition against one of its 2013 judgment.
  • The 2013 SC judgment reversed a 2009 judgment of the Delhi High Court.
  • The Delhi HC judgement made Sec 377 of the Indian Penal Code invalid.
  • Section 377 criminalises sexual activities “against the order of nature”, including homosexual activities.
  • This significantly affects India’s LGBTQI community.

What is SC’s stance?

  • The 2013 SC judgement was one of the lowest moments for human rights in India.
  • Supreme Court has now been supportive to the LGBTQI rights in its initial observations.
  • However, it has said that it would concern itself only with the question of the validity of Sec 377.
  • It would also examine the correctness of the Supreme Court’s 2013 judgment.

What are the concerns?

  • The Supreme Court’s approach appears to be a limited one.
  • As, it tries to interpret a broader human rights and justice issue as a matter of pure constitutional validity.
  • The law is not abstract, and it is important to consider if the law impacts the lived experiences of human beings.
  • It thus calls for SC to also concern itself with the impact of Sec 377 on the lives of the LGBTQI community.

What is the need?

  • Failure to use a rights-based approach has serious social repercussions.
  • Evidently, suicide rates are higher among sexual minorities.
  • Lack of rights and protections promotes a homophobic culture.
  • It overemphasises and empowers patriarchy and masculinity.
  • Widespread homophobia leads gay men and women to create sub-cultures of self-hate, internalised homophobia, and oppression.
  • Lack of social acceptance and legal rights leads to abuse, violence, isolation, and mental illness.
  • Importantly, a rights-based framework is essential to India’s quest for social and economic development.

What should be done?

  • SC should take precedence from its own 2014 judgment that recognises transgender community as a third gender category.
  • It has also recently acknowledged “sexual orientation” an essential attribute of “identity” and “privacy”.
  • It should thus consider the issue of broader rights for sexual minorities. 
  • This should include issues such as right to form partnerships, inheritance, employment equality, and so on.
  • India’s sexual minorities need not only decriminalisation but rights and protections from gender-identity-based discrimination.
  • Clearly, the Court has to expand its ambit to positively affect the lives of millions of Indians.

 

Source: Indian Express

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KIRAN K R 6 years

Thank you for this great work ..... My gratitude  to shankar ias academy

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