MUSLIM INSTANT DIVORCE LAW RULED UNCONSTITUTIONAL AS WOMEN JUBILATE VICTORY

PHOTO Lawyer Farha Faiz speaks with the media after the ruling outside the Supreme Court in New Delhi.

India's Supreme Court has ruled a controversial Muslim instant divorce law unconstitutional, a landmark victory for Muslim women who had long argued that it violated their right to equality.

Key points:

•The law allowed men to divorce their wives by saying "talaq" three times, even via text
•Women celebrate outside the court saying "finally they feel free"
•The ruling was delivered by a panel of five male judges from different faiths
•Prime Minister hails the ruling as a "historic" and "powerful measure"

The law allows Muslim men to divorce their wives simply by uttering the word "talaq" three times — the phrase even applied if said over Skype or even via text message.

For years, Muslim women said they had been left destitute by husbands divorcing them through the controversial practice.

Under the new ruling, the Government will now need to frame new divorce legislation, which would replace the abolished practice of triple talaq.

"Finally, I feel free today," Shayara Bano, who was divorced through triple talaq and was among the women who brought the case, told reporters after the ruling.
"I have the order that will liberate many Muslim women."

The ruling was delivered by a panel of five male judges from different faiths — Hinduism, Christianity, Islam, Sikhism and Zoroastrianism.

Three of the five ruled that the practice was unconstitutional, overruling the senior-most judge in India, the chief justice — he then announced a suspension of the practice, and told the Government to come up with a new law within six months.

Two of the judges said triple talaq was "arbitrary" and violated fundamental rights, while one concluded that the practice was not "integral" to the Muslim faith.

Many Muslim countries have banned the practice of triple talaq, including neighbouring Pakistan and conservative Saudi Arabia.

Opposition to the law helped forge an unlikely coalition of Muslim women and Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his ruling Hindu nationalist party, which wanted the law quashed, and pitted it against Muslim groups that say the state has no right to interfere in religious matters.

'Powerful measure for women': Prime Minister
Opponents of the law have toiled to abolish it for decades and were given a boost last year when Mr Modi threw his support behind activist Shayara Bano, calling the law derogatory and discriminatory against women.
Mr Modi hailed the judgment as "historic" on Twitter.

Tuesday's ruling could spur Mr Modi's party to push again for its long-held desire for a uniform civil code, which would end the application of religious laws to civil issues.

"The Supreme Court has a right to interfere in the personal space and they have done so," Maneka Gandhi, Minister for Women and Child Development, said.
Some Muslim institutions have said that while triple talaq is wrong, the law should be reviewed by the community itself, while others fear that the Hindu majority is trying to limit Islamic influence in society — Muslims make up about 14 per cent of India's 1.3 billion people.

The All India Muslim Personal Law Board said it would contest the court's decision.

"The fact that only three of the five judges have deemed the practice illegal shows that there was no clear decision," member Maqsood Hasani Nadvi said.
India allows religious institutions to govern matters of personal law — marriage, divorce and property inheritance — through civil codes designed to protect the independence of religious communities.

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