By PTI
NEW DELHI: Activists and members of the LGBTQ+ neighborhood have criticised the Centre’s opposition to granting recognition to same-sex marriage, saying regardless of India’s plurality and variety the federal government nonetheless believes that marriage rights can solely be given to heterosexuals.
In an affidavit earlier than the Supreme Court which is scheduled to listen to the matter on Monday, the Centre has stated authorized validation of same-sex marriage would trigger full havoc with the fragile stability of private legal guidelines and accepted societal values.
It, nevertheless, added that non-heterosexual types of marriages or unions between people although not recognised are usually not illegal.
Reacting to the Centre’s affidavit, equal rights activist Harish Iyer and a member of the neighborhood stated India is a nation of plurality, not homogeneity.
“Unity in diversity is a lesson we learn in our schools. Everyone is equal in the eyes of law. Yet we afford marriage rights only to the majority and not us minorities. The state in its stance has confirmed that they believe that marriage is only between a biological man and a biological woman and their offspring,” Iyer informed PTI.
Iyer additional slammed the language utilized by the Centre within the affidavit.
“The very language reveals that the state needs a crash course on sex, sexuality and gender. The correct terms are cis man and cis woman. Now that the Supreme Court has written down Section 377, I would like to know from the state how they define LGBT families,” Iyer stated.
In its affidavit, the federal government submitted that regardless of the decriminalisation of Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, the petitioners can not declare a basic proper for same-sex marriage to be recognised underneath the legal guidelines of the nation.
A queer scholar and PhD candidate on the University of St Andrews in Scotland, who prefers to be recognized as Q, stated queer intimacies predate the Indian State by many centuries and the State has all the time been essentially heterosexual.
“The Centre stated that the traditional heterosexual family unit is foundational to the existence and continuance of the State. This is partly correct. The State has always been fundamentally heterosexual; its institutions, its laws, its capitalist structures, even its borders veered toward the cis-heterosexual upper-caste male. The State is also drenched in its masculinity. That being said the Centre hides within these truths one distinct untruth – that the continuance of the State has never been in question,” Q stated.
Q additional rued that the State will persist no matter whether or not or not homosexual marriage exists, just because the State exists now.
“Gay marriage is an institutionalisation of existing relationships. What the Centre perhaps meant by that affidavit is that heterosexual marriage is foundational to the continuance of the present regime…,” Q stated.
The Supreme Court had struck down the draconian Article 377 that criminalised homosexual intercourse and since then many petitions have been filed within the apex courtroom to legalise same-sex marriage too.
Shubhankar Chakravorty, a Bengaluru-based guide who identifies as a homosexual man, stated rights and freedoms have seldom been offered upfront of a mass battle or in anticipation of a sizeable demand and particularly when it is a matter as advanced as marriage legislation that includes a bunch of associated legal guidelines, there must be a strong case of beneficial public influence.
“India has an LGBT+ population of at least 50 million (less than 5 per cent of 1.4 billion) and still you’d struggle to find a few thousand same-sex couples in present need of marriage rights. While it’s a very real need for many people currently in long-term relationships/civil partnerships, same-sex parenting, etc., the number isn’t high enough to put pressure on the government.”
“So, much like the movements preceding the amendment of Section 377, there need to be large-scale activities and campaigns to relay the importance of marriage equality and how it impacts hundreds of thousands of real people,” he informed PTI.
“Till then, as unfair as the government’s stand is, there isn’t much to counter it with. The LGBT+ community, which is still trying to make sense of what it means to have rights and freedom around gender, sex, and sexuality post the Section 377 ruling, needs to do more to assert the real-life outcomes of those rights and freedoms,” he added.
NEW DELHI: Activists and members of the LGBTQ+ neighborhood have criticised the Centre’s opposition to granting recognition to same-sex marriage, saying regardless of India’s plurality and variety the federal government nonetheless believes that marriage rights can solely be given to heterosexuals.
In an affidavit earlier than the Supreme Court which is scheduled to listen to the matter on Monday, the Centre has stated authorized validation of same-sex marriage would trigger full havoc with the fragile stability of private legal guidelines and accepted societal values.
It, nevertheless, added that non-heterosexual types of marriages or unions between people although not recognised are usually not illegal.googletag.cmd.push(operate() googletag.show(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); );
Reacting to the Centre’s affidavit, equal rights activist Harish Iyer and a member of the neighborhood stated India is a nation of plurality, not homogeneity.
“Unity in diversity is a lesson we learn in our schools. Everyone is equal in the eyes of law. Yet we afford marriage rights only to the majority and not us minorities. The state in its stance has confirmed that they believe that marriage is only between a biological man and a biological woman and their offspring,” Iyer informed PTI.
Iyer additional slammed the language utilized by the Centre within the affidavit.
“The very language reveals that the state needs a crash course on sex, sexuality and gender. The correct terms are cis man and cis woman. Now that the Supreme Court has written down Section 377, I would like to know from the state how they define LGBT families,” Iyer stated.
In its affidavit, the federal government submitted that regardless of the decriminalisation of Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, the petitioners can not declare a basic proper for same-sex marriage to be recognised underneath the legal guidelines of the nation.
A queer scholar and PhD candidate on the University of St Andrews in Scotland, who prefers to be recognized as Q, stated queer intimacies predate the Indian State by many centuries and the State has all the time been essentially heterosexual.
“The Centre stated that the traditional heterosexual family unit is foundational to the existence and continuance of the State. This is partly correct. The State has always been fundamentally heterosexual; its institutions, its laws, its capitalist structures, even its borders veered toward the cis-heterosexual upper-caste male. The State is also drenched in its masculinity. That being said the Centre hides within these truths one distinct untruth – that the continuance of the State has never been in question,” Q stated.
Q additional rued that the State will persist no matter whether or not or not homosexual marriage exists, just because the State exists now.
“Gay marriage is an institutionalisation of existing relationships. What the Centre perhaps meant by that affidavit is that heterosexual marriage is foundational to the continuance of the present regime…,” Q stated.
The Supreme Court had struck down the draconian Article 377 that criminalised homosexual intercourse and since then many petitions have been filed within the apex courtroom to legalise same-sex marriage too.
Shubhankar Chakravorty, a Bengaluru-based guide who identifies as a homosexual man, stated rights and freedoms have seldom been offered upfront of a mass battle or in anticipation of a sizeable demand and particularly when it is a matter as advanced as marriage legislation that includes a bunch of associated legal guidelines, there must be a strong case of beneficial public influence.
“India has an LGBT+ population of at least 50 million (less than 5 per cent of 1.4 billion) and still you’d struggle to find a few thousand same-sex couples in present need of marriage rights. While it’s a very real need for many people currently in long-term relationships/civil partnerships, same-sex parenting, etc., the number isn’t high enough to put pressure on the government.”
“So, much like the movements preceding the amendment of Section 377, there need to be large-scale activities and campaigns to relay the importance of marriage equality and how it impacts hundreds of thousands of real people,” he informed PTI.
“Till then, as unfair as the government’s stand is, there isn’t much to counter it with. The LGBT+ community, which is still trying to make sense of what it means to have rights and freedom around gender, sex, and sexuality post the Section 377 ruling, needs to do more to assert the real-life outcomes of those rights and freedoms,” he added.