Indian top court rules gay sex is no more a crime

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2018-09-06T13:06:00+05:00

New Delhi (Web Desk): Indian Supreme Court on Thursday declared that gay sex is no more a crime.

Partially scrapping Section 377, which bans consensual gay sex, a five-member bench, headed by Chief Justice Dipak Mishra, saying consensual sex between adults, which is not harmful to women or children, cannot be denied as it the choice of an individual.

The court said the law is ‘irrational, arbitrary and incomprehensible,’ adding that LGBT community has equal rights in society like other citizens.

In four separate but concurring verdicts, the five judges of the apex court announced that the section failed to make a distinction between consensual and non-consensual acts. Bestiality will also continue to be a crime under section 377.

“It had become a weapon for the harassment for LGBT and subject them to discrimination,” Chief Justice Misra said.

The top court reversed its own 2013 decision.

The high court had decriminalised consensual gay sex in 2009 but the top court had cancelled the order four years later, ruling that only parliament should be changing laws, Hindustan Times reported.

In 2016, the top court, however, agreed to take up a petition by five prominent members of the LGBT, or lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community Bharatnatyam dancer Navtej Johar, culture expert Aman Nath, restaurateurs Ritu Dalmia and Ayesha Kapur and media person Sunil Mehra, challenging the British-era law, section 377.

Later, a five-member bench was set up to determine if the provision violates fundamental rights assured by the constitution. The hearing was concluded in July.

The petitioners argued that Section 377 violates rights and principles guaranteed by the constitution, like equality before law, no discrimination based on religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth and freedom of speech and expression.

Huge crowd of gay activists and people from different backgrounds, fighting for the scrapping of Section 377 were gathered outside the court to hear the landmark the verdict.

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