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| The banning of triple talaq, or 'instant divorce', led to celebrations across India by some Muslim women's groups (AFP Photo/Sajjad HUSSAIN) |
New Delhi (AFP) - The Indian government and women's groups hailed "historic" legislation Wednesday that criminalised "instant divorce" for Muslims, but an influential Islamic group said it would launch a legal challenge.
India's
upper house passed a bill Tuesday banning the centuries-old practice that
allowed men to separate from their wives by saying "talaq" -- or
divorce -- three times.
Husbands
who use it now can be jailed for up to three years or be fined.
Some Muslim
women's groups celebrated at events across India, which has followed Pakistan,
Bangladesh, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates in regulating "triple
talaq".
Zakia
Soman, a social activist who launched a campaign against the practice nearly a
decade ago, said the legislation would serve as a deterrent against the unjust
treatment of women, some of whom were divorced with a WhatsApp message or by
phone.
"This
law is the result of decades of injustice meted out to Muslim women and the
unsympathetic attitude of the political class and clergy," Soman told AFP.
The
government called the parliament vote "historic".
"An
archaic and medieval practice has finally been confined to the dustbin of
history," Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Twitter late Tuesday.
'Medieval' divorce banned
But other
Muslim groups fought the law and even the opposition Congress Party was against
it, accusing Modi's right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of targeting one
minority group.
Zafaryab
Jilani of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board vowed Wednesday to challenge
the new legislation in court.
He said the
action was part of a wider campaign by Modi's Hindu nationalist party to
undermine religious freedom.
"We
are not surprised by the legislation as it is part of their larger agenda to
change the country's constitution and snatch away the rights of
minorities," Jilani, secretary of the Muslim group, told AFP.
Jilani said
a petition against the law had nearly 50 million signatories across India.
Asaduddin
Owaisi, a leading Muslim lawmaker, said the new legislation "should be
seen only as one part of many attacks on Muslim identity and citizenship"
since Modi came to power in 2014.
India's
Supreme Court ruled triple talaq illegal in 2017, following a campaign by
Muslim women whose marriages were ended by the practice. But the top court said
the government had to pass legislation to ban it.
Law
minister Ravi Shanker Prasad quoting media reports told parliament that around
350 cases had been reported since the Supreme Court ruling in 2017.

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