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| India's Supreme Court has ruled a century-old adultery law is unconstitutional and discriminatory against women (AFP) |
NEW DELHI
(AFP) - India's top
court Thursday ruled that adultery is no longer a crime, declaring a
colonial-era law that punished the offence with jail time unconstitutional and
discriminatory against women.
The more
than century-old law prescribed that any man who slept with a married woman
without her husband's permission had committed adultery, a crime carrying a
five-year prison term.
"Thinking
of adultery from a point of view of criminality is a retrograde step,"
unanimously declared the five-judge bench of the Supreme Court.
Women could
not file a complaint under the archaic law nor be held liable for adultery
themselves, making it solely the realm of men.
The court
said the law deprived women of dignity and individual choice, and treated them
as the property of men.
It also
said that adultery, while valid grounds for divorce, was a private matter.
The court
upheld the legality of the crime in 1954, arguing that in adultery "it is
commonly accepted that it is the man who is the seducer, and not the
women".
A
petitioner had challenged the law earlier this year, describing it as
discriminatory.

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