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Adultery no longer a crime in India Adultery no longer a criminal offence in India
(34 minutes later)
India's top court has ruled adultery is no longer a criminal offence.India's top court has ruled adultery is no longer a criminal offence.
The Supreme Court overturned a 158-year-old law which said any man who had sex with a married woman, without the permission of her husband, was guilty of the criminal act of adultery. The 158-year-old colonial-era law said any man who had sex with a married woman, without the permission of her husband, was guilty of the criminal act of adultery.
It is not clear how many men have been prosecuted under the law since its inception - there is no data available.It is not clear how many men have been prosecuted under the law since its inception - there is no data available.
A petitioner had challenged the law saying it was arbitrary and discriminated against men and women.A petitioner had challenged the law saying it was arbitrary and discriminated against men and women.
While reading out the judgement, Chief Justice Dipak Misra said "adultery can be ground for civil issues including dissolution of marriage but it cannot be a criminal offence". This is the second colonial-era law struck down by the Supreme Court this month - it also overturned a 157-year-old law which effectively criminalised gay sex in India.
He added that the law discriminated against women, saying "treating women with indignity or discrimination invites the wrath of the constitution". While reading out the judgement on adultery, Chief Justice Dipak Misra said that while it could be grounds for civil issues like divorce, "it cannot be a criminal offence".
Who challenged the law?
Last August, Joseph Shine, a 41-year-old Indian businessman living in Italy, petitioned the Supreme Court to strike down the law.
"Married women are not a special case for the purpose of prosecution for adultery. They are not in any way situated differently than men," his petition said.
The law, Mr Shine said, also "indirectly discriminates against women by holding an erroneous presumption that women are the property of men".
What did the adultery law say?
The law dictated that the woman could not be punished as an abettor. Instead, the man was considered to be a seducer.
It also did not allow women to file a complaint against an adulterous husband.
A man accused of adultery could be sent to a prison for a maximum of five years, made to pay a fine, or both.
And although there is no information on actual convictions under the law, Kaleeswaram Raj, a lawyer for the petitioner, said the adultery law was "often misused" by husbands during matrimonial disputes such as divorce, or civil cases relating to wives receiving maintenance.
"Men would often file criminal complaints against suspected or imagined men who they would allege were having affairs with their wives. These charges could never be proved, but ended up smearing the reputations of their estranged or divorced partners," he told the BBC.
Interestingly, Indian folklore and epics are full of stories about extra-marital love. Most love poems in Sanskrit, according to scholar J Moussaief Masson, are "about illicit love".
But Manusmriti, widely regarded to be the most important and authoritative book on Hindu law and dating back to at least 1,000 years before Christ was born, says: "If men persist in seeking intimate contact with other men's wives, the king should brand them with punishments that inspire terror and banish them".