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Centre Delays Implementing SC Order to Publicise Sec 377 Verdict

RTI reveals even after 2 months of SC striking down section 377, centre is yet to publicise the verdict.

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LGBT
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In response to an RTI application filed by Delhi-based advocate Paras Nath Singh (see Images 1 & 2) on 22 September 2018, with the Central Public Information Officer (CPIO), the Ministry of Home Affairs, it has now come to light that the Union government has not yet implemented the directions issued by the Supreme Court of India that required the Central government to give wide-scale publicity to the Supreme Court judgment in Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India.

The apex court had directed the Union government to widely publicise the Section 377 verdict through public media — which includes television, radio, print and online media — at regular intervals, and initiate programmes to reduce and finally eliminate the stigma associated with LGBTQI persons.

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RTI reveals even after 2 months of SC striking  down section 377, centre is yet to publicise the verdict.
Image 1: Page 1 of RTI application filed by Paras Nath Singh September 22, 2018
The Leaflet
RTI reveals even after 2 months of SC striking  down section 377, centre is yet to publicise the verdict.
Image 2: Page 2 of RTI application filed by Paras Nath Singh on 22 September 2018
The Leaflet

A five-judge Constitution bench — comprising then Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dipak Misra and Justices Rohinton F Nariman, AM Khanwilker, DY Chandrachud and Indu Malhotra — in a landmark judgment delivered on 6 September 2018 had decriminalised sex amongst consenting adults in private, thereby reading down Section 377, IPC insofar as it criminalised “sex against the order of nature,” disproportionately impacting members of the LGBTQI community. The above-mentioned directions in the 377 judgment were penned down by Justice Rohinton F Nariman, who in his separate but concurring judgment, had called upon the Central government to ensure implementation of the landmark verdict by the apex court in letter and spirit.

The judgment held that Section 377 of the IPC, to the extent it criminalised sexual acts between consenting adults in private, was in violation of Articles 14 and 15 (equality and discrimination); Article 19 (Fundamental Freedoms) and Article 21 (privacy and dignity).

RTI reveals even after 2 months of SC striking  down section 377, centre is yet to publicise the verdict.
Image 3: Reply from the Union Ministry of Home Affairs.
The Leaflet
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CPIO’s reply (Image 3) further reveals that Union Home Ministry received the copy of the said judgment on 18 September 2018. However, the Ministry has not taken any call even after two months of the receiving of the judgment and the matter is still being examined by the Central Government. MHA has also informed that the Assistant Registrar of the Supreme Court of India on 11 September 2018 circulated the said judgment to the Chief Secretaries of all the States for necessary compliance.

Centre had filed an affidavit in the Supreme Court leaving it on the wisdom of the court to decide the validity of Section 377 of the IPC —thus the Centre neither contested the case, nor favoured it.

One of the queries in the RTI application by Singh was the name and designation of the competent authority who approved the affidavit and connected file noting(s) generated in processing the same. The Union Home Ministry, however, chose not to reply on this point.

(This story first appeared on The Leaflet and has been republished with permission.)

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