- Bosnia floods kill 14 people
- Tennis world number one Swiatek splits with coach Wiktorowski
- Liverpool share responsibility for Nunez goal drought, says Slot
- Top EU court finds against FIFA in key transfer market ruling
- Oil extends gains, Hong Kong stocks resume rally
- Top seed Sabalenka stunned by Muchova in Beijing last eight
- Khamenei says Iran's allies 'will not back down' in war with Israel
- Tsitsipas gets revenge against Nishikori at Shanghai Masters
- 'Alone against world': lawyer defending Frenchman in mass rape trial
- 'A man provides': Ukrainian miners send families away as Russia advances
- EU states greenlight extra tariffs on EVs from China
- Singapore charges hotel tycoon in case linked to jailed minister
- India asks top court to heed marital rape leniency
- S. Korean director brings fresh film adaptation to Busan festival
- Hong Kong stocks bounce as Middle East fears boost crude again
- Blood and blades as Thailand celebrates vegetarian festival
- Binder tops Japan MotoGP practice with Martin third
- Hong Kong stocks resume rally, oil dips after Middle East-fuelled surge
- Lebanon says Israeli strike cuts off main road to Syria
- India asks top court not to toughen marital rape penalties
- Sinner not 'comfortable' as doping case clouds Shanghai campaign
- Brazilians choose mayors, councillors in bellwether election
- Japan PM warns 'today's Ukraine could be tomorrow's East Asia'
- Portugal looks to put new twist on cork industry
- Spoon scratching: Kenya's DIY DJ
- Lyon's Matavesi calls for change after 'crazy' World Cup salary strike threat
- Israel bombards Beirut after deadliest West Bank strike in decades
- North Korea's Kim threatens to use nukes if attacked
- Taiwan cleans up after Typhoon Krathon batters south
- Bayern look to rebound at bogey side Frankfurt
- Finally beaten Madrid aiming for Villarreal rebound in La Liga
- Crude stable after Israel-Iran surge, Hong Kong stocks resume gains
- Bagnaia leads Martin in first Japan MotoGP practice
- Bolivia's Morales investigated for rape of a minor: minister
- Former Wallaby O'Connor signs for Canterbury Crusaders
- Ipswich Town's Luongo enticed back to Socceroos under new coach Popovic
- Three US police convicted in connection with beating death of Black man
- Iran's Khamenei to give rare Friday sermon after attack on Israel
- EU court set for key Diarra ruling which could shake up transfer market
- Taliban's battle with IS opens door to foreign cooperation
- More than AI misinformation, US voters worry about lying politicians
- EU states set to greenlight extra tariffs on EVs from China
- Could abortion hold the keys to the White House for Kamala Harris?
- Anti-Trump Republican Cheney rallies with Harris in key battleground
- Hera spacecraft to probe asteroid deflected by defence test
- AI bubble or 'revolution'? OpenAI's big payday fuels debate
- One job by day, another by night as US voters make ends meet
- Guatemala choses new Supreme Court judges in questioned process
- Man Utd's Ten Hag faces make-or-break trip to Aston Villa
- US dockworkers to head back to work after tentative deal
CMSC | -0.16% | 24.74 | $ | |
RBGPF | 100% | 58.93 | $ | |
SCS | -1.98% | 12.62 | $ | |
AZN | -2.12% | 77.93 | $ | |
NGG | -2.7% | 66.97 | $ | |
GSK | -2.81% | 38.37 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.16% | 24.89 | $ | |
RELX | -1.46% | 46.61 | $ | |
RYCEF | 1.15% | 6.98 | $ | |
RIO | -1.42% | 69.83 | $ | |
BTI | -2.45% | 35.11 | $ | |
BCC | -0.9% | 138.29 | $ | |
BCE | -1.77% | 33.84 | $ | |
JRI | -0.6% | 13.3 | $ | |
BP | 0.28% | 32.46 | $ | |
VOD | -0.52% | 9.69 | $ |
India asks top court to heed marital rape leniency
India's government has insisted that marital rape should be treated more leniently than other rape offences in an ongoing Supreme Court case brought by campaigners seeking to outlaw it.
The penal code introduced in the 19th century during British colonial rule of India explicitly states that "sexual acts by a man with his own wife... is not rape".
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government enacted an overhauled code in July which retains that clause, despite the decade-long court challenge by activists seeking to make marital rape illegal.
India's interior ministry filed an affidavit to the Supreme Court on Thursday stating that while marital rape should result in "penal consequences", the legal system should treat it more leniently than rape committed outside of marriage.
"A husband certainly does not have any fundamental right to violate the consent of his wife," the affidavit said, according to The Indian Express newspaper.
"However, attracting the crime in the nature of 'rape' as recognised in India to the institution of marriage can be arguably considered to be excessively harsh."
India's current penal code mandates a minimum 10-year sentence for those convicted of rape.
The government's statement said that marital rape was adequately addressed in existing laws, including a 2005 law protecting women from domestic violence.
That law recognises sexual abuse as a form of domestic violence but does not prescribe any criminal penalties to perpetrators.
Another section of the penal code punishes broadly defined acts of "cruelty" by a husband against their wife with prison terms of up to three years.
Six percent of Indian married women aged 18-49 have reported spousal sexual violence, according to the government's latest National Family Health Survey conducted from 2019 to 2021.
In the world's most populous country, that implies more than 10 million women have been victims of sexual violence at the hands of their husbands.
Nearly 18 percent of married women also feel they cannot say no if their husbands want sex, according to the survey.
Divorce remains taboo across much of India with only one in every 100 marriages ending in dissolution, often owing to family and social pressure to sustain unhappy marriages.
Chronic backlogs in India's criminal justice system mean some cases take decades to reach a resolution, and the case pushing for the criminalisation of marital rape has made painfully slow progress.
It was referred to the Supreme Court after a two-judge bench in the Delhi High Court issued a split verdict in May 2022.
One judge in that case ruled that while "one may disapprove" of a husband forcibly having sex with his wife, that "cannot be equated with the act of ravishing by a stranger".
L.Mason--AMWN