India court denigrates 'immoral live-in' relationships
Source : BBC
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court in the Indian capital, Delhi, has said that live-in relationships
are immoral and an "infamous product of Western culture".
Judge Surinder S Rathi made the remarks after sentencing an Indian woman for killing her Nigerian partner.Justice Rathi said the live-in relationships were "a fad that is visible only in urban areas".
Though the Supreme Court has endorsed them, live-in relationships are still frowned upon by society in India.
Justice Rathi of the trial court said live-in relationships are still perceived as immoral in India.
"Evidence available on record shows that the immorality of this relationship was further aggravated by the unabated flow of liquor and smoke," he was quoted as saying by The Indian Express newspaper.
In 2010, the Supreme Court dismissed a number of cases against a Tamil actress who spoke in support of the right of women to have pre-marital sex. The court also endorsed the right of unmarried couples to live together.
Actress Kushboo was accused of outraging public decency and 22 cases were filed against her in 2005.
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India court backs rights of unmarried couples
Kushboo's comments created a stir
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The Supreme Court in India has endorsed the right of
unmarried couples to live together in a case involving an actress
accused of outraging public decency.
A three-judge panel in Delhi pointed out that even Hindu Gods Lord Krishna and Radha were co-habiting lovers. Actress Kushboo was appealing to the court to quash more than 20 cases filed against her in 2005.
In a 2005 interview she said it was not wrong for women to have pre-marital sex as long as they took precautions.
She said that it was also "not fair of any educated youth to expect his wife to be a virgin".
The remarks stirred controversy in a conservative country where pre-marital sex is still a cultural taboo.
Some Tamil nationalist political groups accused the actress of making derogatory and obscene remarks against Tamil culture.
Several cases have been filed against her across Tamil Nadu in various courts under different sections of the Indian penal code.
If found guilty, she faces imprisonment or a fine.
Central tenet
"When two adult people want to live together, what is the offence?" the judges said. "Living together is not an offence. Living together is a right to life."
The judges said they were "not bothered" by Kushboo's personal views and reserved judgement on her petition.
Marriage remains a central tenet in India, with weddings celebrated in lavish style and many households made up of extended families.
The BBC's Geeta Pandey in Delhi in India says that pre-marital sex will remain taboo in India - despite Wednesday's ruling - and live-in relationships are rare and frowned upon by society.
Source : BBC
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