By New
Age Islam Staff Writer
1 July 2023
The Country
Has Already Made Some Progress Towards A Uniform Civil Code
Main
Points:
1. 1. Special Marriage Act 1954 was a step towards UCC.
2. Dowry
Prohibition Act 1961 was the second step.
3. Foreign
marriage Act 1969 was another step.
4. Maintenance
Law under criminal procedure was another way forward.
5. Protection
of women under domestic violence Act 2006.
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Mahmood writes: The provision for UCC is there in Article 44 under Part
IV of the Constitution formulating a number of Directive Principles of State
Policy, which are not enforceable by the courts but are to be “nevertheless
fundamental in the governance of the country” (Article 37). (Express Photo)
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The debate
over the implementation of the Uniform Civil Code has gathered more steam as
the government has expressed its intent to bring the UCC bill in the monsoon
session. Muslim organisations have been protesting and opposing the UCC on the
grounds that it will infringe on the religious rights of the Muslims and will
interfere with the Muslim Personal Law.
Liberal
Muslims, however, argue that a Uniform Civil Code will not interfere with the
rights of Muslims and other minorities. A third section of intellectuals are of
the opinion that the country has already made gradual progress towards
implementing a uniform civil code by enacting various laws that apply to all
the religious communities. Tahir Mahmood, for example, gives the list of some
of the laws that were enacted since,1954. Among them are Special Marriage ,Act
1954, Dowry Prohibition Act 1961, Foreign Marriage Act 1969, Protection of
Women under Domestic Violence Act 2005, Prohibition of Child Marriage Act 2006
etc.
There are
other laws that have been enacted to bring uniformity in the family law system
of the country. These laws overrode contrary provisions of the Personal Laws of
all communities. For example, child marriage is permissible in Islamic Shariah
and also in the Hindu society but the Muslim community never made an issue of
the Child Marriage Provision Act because they wanted to show to the world that
they do not consider child marriage appropriate in the modern social milieu.
Similarly,
the concept of domestic violence under the Muslim Personal Law is not in
consonance with the law against domestic violence. The Muslim Personal Law
permits wife beating to a certain limit but the law banned all kind of
violence. Still, the Muslims did not run a campaign against the law.
However,
the governments eagerness to bring the UCC Bill raises some questions. The
political analysts see the endeavour in the background of the next year's
general elections. Tahir Mahmood rightly observes that the issue is being
debated in shallow manner and the political leadership does not show the
seriousness it deserves. To what extent the UCC will affect the personal laws
of the Muslims and what reactions will it evoke from different stakeholders will
only be clear when the final draft of the law is tabled in the Parliament.
Therefore, the Muslims should adopt the policy of wait and watch.
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Tahir
Mahmood Writes: The Case For A Uniform Civil Code
By
Tahir Mahmood
July 1,
2023
The
constitutional provision for a uniform civil code (UCC), in view of its
inherent intricacies and the widespread misgivings engulfing it, requires
abundant caution when its aims, objects, and the ways and means for its
implementation are spoken and written about. Unfortunately, however, it is
often read quite superficially and talked about in terms that are irrelevant to
its actual logic and rationale. A reality check in this regard is, therefore, a
national imperative.
The
provision for UCC is there in Article 44 under Part IV of the Constitution
formulating a number of Directive Principles of State Policy, which are not
enforceable by the courts but are to be “nevertheless fundamental in the
governance of the country” (Article 37). Notably, it speaks of a uniform and not
a common civil code — the difference being loud and clear — and directs the
State to “endeavour to secure” it, not to enact it at one go. Reading it with
the words of Article 37 — which prompt the State “to apply these principles in
making laws” — clearly indicates that the makers of the Constitution wanted
uniformity to be gradually effected in the heterogeneous family law system of
the country by suitably amending the old laws, and enacting new ones to serve
the purpose.
It is not
true that there has been no progress in this direction. Many new laws of
general application have been enacted over the years — to name a few, the
Special Marriage Act 1954, Dowry Prohibition Act 1961, Foreign Marriage Act
1969, maintenance law under the Criminal Procedure Code 1973, Protection of
Women from Domestic Violence Act 2005, Prohibition of Child Marriage Act 2006,
and Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act 2007. The
totality of these laws, each overriding contrary provisions of all personal laws,
partly answers the demand of the Constitution for uniformity in family laws. By
way of another step in this direction, various personal laws have been amended
on almost similar lines.
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Also
Read: Why Critics Of Uniform Civil Code Should Come Up With
Better Arguments
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A new
comprehensive civil code, if enacted, will replace personal laws of all
communities, none of which are at present free from religious bias and gender
inequalities. But it is generally projected as a measure aimed at doing away
with Muslim law, which is seen as archaic and anti-women. This misperception
has turned the noble constitutional ideal into a nightmare for the Muslim
clergy and the masses alike who naively believe their law to be divine and
hence sacrosanct, shutting their eyes to the fact that their law as practised
here is not the true Islamic law. In its authentic version, this law is not
entirely incompatible with the modern age. Justice Krishna Iyer had once said
that Islamic law recognised the “sanctity of family life” and “stubborn
incompatibility between the spouses as a ground for divorce” (Yousuf Rawther,
1971). The divorce law of Islam was in fact based on the concept of
irretrievable breakdown of marriage but is now drowned in a quagmire of
distortions.
Proponents
of the UCC often see the four Hindu law Acts of 1955-56 as a model — even an
apex court judge once said so (Justice Kuldip Singh in Sarla Mudgal 1995).
These Acts were originally full of provisions conflicting with the
constitutional ideals of religious equality and gender justice. Recent
amendments have made considerable improvement, but still there is much to be
desired.
Under the
Hindu Succession Act, the course of inheritance still depends on whether the
deceased owner of a property was a man or a woman, and in the latter case, on
the source of the property. Among the parents of the deceased only the mother
is a preferential heir; the father is excluded by many other preferential heirs
whose list was illogically enlarged in 2005. Under the adoption law a man needs
his wife’s consent for adopting a child, and even for giving their child for adoption
to someone else, only if she belongs to the same faith.
The Special
Marriage Act 1954 originally said that succession to the properties of parties
to civil marriages, and of their descendants, would be governed by the Indian
Succession Act 1925. In 1976, it was amended to the effect that if both parties
to such a marriage are Hindu they would be governed not by the said Act but by
the Hindu Succession Act, while for all other communities, the law on this
point remained unchanged. This amendment, advocated by the Law Commission of
the time, was clearly an antithesis of uniformity.
The Special
Marriage Act and the four Hindu law Acts — contrary to their prefatory
declaration of extension “to the whole of India” — are not in force in certain
parts of the country. There are places whose local laws of foreign origin are
protected by parliamentary legislation or whose customary laws are safeguarded
by the Constitution. This situation, clearly repugnant to the closing words of
Article 44 — “throughout the territory of India” — has all along been ignored
by those lamenting inaction under its provision. Uniformity of laws by itself
is no virtue. The rationale of the constitutional provision on UCC is to make
family laws of the country free from all sorts of religion-based discrimination
and gender inequalities.
An apex
court judge had once observed: “The desirability of uniform civil code can
hardly be doubted. But it can concretise only when the social climate is
properly built up by the elite of the society and statesmen, instead of gaining
personal mileage, rise above and awaken the masses to accept the change.”
(Justice R M Sahai of Sarla Mudgal bench, 1995). The UCC issue must, in the
fitness of things, be totally excluded from the political domain. If a
representative group of acclaimed social reformers and legal academics produce
a draft free from the vices of religious discrimination and gender inequality
it can — rather must — be extended to all citizens in all parts of the country.
This is the course of action the Constitution wanted to be pursued but which
has evaded the nation throughout these long years.
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Tahir Mahmood is distinguished jurist chair and
professor of eminence, Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, Amity University.
Source: Tahir
Mahmood Writes: The Case For A Uniform Civil Code
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-politics/constitution-ucc-common-civil-code/d/130112
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