Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India | Section 377 IPC | Decriminalize Homosexuality |Case Summary

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  • Опубликовано: 4 сен 2024
  • citation:
    WRIT PETITION (CRIMINAL) NO. 76 OF 2016
    court:
    SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
    judges:
    CHIEF JUSTICE DIPAK MISRA, JUSTICE ROHINGTON NARIMAN, JUSTICE D Y CHANDRACHUD, JUSTICE A M KHANVILKAR, & JUSTICE INDU MALHOTRA
    KEY FACTS:
    Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) criminalised consensual sexual intercourse between persons of the same sex for being “against the order of nature”. In 2009, before the Delhi High Court, the Naz Foundation (India) Trust (“Naz”) challenged the constitutionality of Section 377 for violating Articles 14, 15, 19 and 21 of the Constitution. The court ruled that punishing sexual activity between two consenting adults under Section 377 violates the right to equality, privacy and personal liberty of such persons.
    This decision was appealed before the Supreme Court and in 2013, the Court reversed the Naz verdict in Suresh Kumar Koushal & Anr. v. Naz Foundation & Ors. (“Koushal”). It held that only the Parliament could decriminalize homosexuality.
    Five individuals from the LGBTQ communities (Navtej Singh Johar, Ritu Dalmia, Ayesha Kapur, Aman Nath and Sunil Mehra) filed a new writ petition challenging the constitutionality of Section 377.
    ISSUES & DECISION:
    The Court deliberated on the soundness of the Koushal decision. It also considered whether Section 377 violates:
    Article 14 as it discriminates against individuals on the basis of their “sexual orientation” and “gender identity”?
    The right to autonomy and dignity under Article 21 by penalizing private consensual acts between same-sex persons?
    The right to expression under Article 19(1)(a) by criminalizing the gender expression of the LGBTQI+ community?
    The Decision in ‘Koushal’
    All five judges overruled Koushal. The Court drew on the doctrine of progressive realisation of rights to hold that rights should not be revoked. The march of a progressive society should only be forward.
    The Court also noted the guarantee of a fundamental right to privacy in Justice K. S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) vs Union Of India and held that Koushal’s finding that Section 377 affected only a ‘miniscule minority’ cannot be the basis to deny the right to privacy. It observed that minorities face discrimination because their views and beliefs do not align with the majority and the Koushal decision violated the right of all persons to equal protection.
    The Litmus Test for Survival of Section 377
    The Supreme Court tested the constitutionality of Section 377 against the principles of equality, liberty, dignity under Articles 14, 19 and 21.
    Right to Equality and Non-Discrimination: The Court observed that Section 377 arbitrarily punishes individuals who engage in same sex relationships. To substantiate this, the Court noted that Section 377 classifies and punishes individuals who engage in carnal intercourse against the order of nature to protect women and children. However, this objective has no reasonable nexus with the classification, as unnatural offences have also been separately penalised under Section 375 and the POCSO Act. Therefore, the Court held that the unequal treatment of LGBT individuals violates Article 14.Further, the Court held that Section 377 is manifestly arbitrary as it does not distinguish between consensual and non-consensual sexual acts between adults. It targeted people exercising certain choices and treated them as “less than humans” and encouraged prejudices and stereotypes accompanied by debilitating social effects. This violates Article 14, which is the very basis of non-discrimination.
    Freedom of Expression: The Court acknowledged that all persons, including LGBTQI individuals, had the right to express their choices without any fear. It recognized same-sex sexuality as a normal variant of human sexuality. In particular, the Court noted that Section 377 stigmatises and discriminates against transgender persons.Next, the Court tested whether public order, decency and morality are reasonable grounds to restrict the right to freedom of expression of sexuality under Article 19(1)(a). It noted that Section 377 criminalises private consensual acts which neither disturb public order, nor injure public decency or morality. Sexual acts cannot be viewed solely from the lens of morality where they are seen to be purely for procreation. An unreasonable restriction on acts within a person’s private space will have a chilling effect on freedom of choice.For these reasons, the Court held that Section 377 is disproportionate and violates the fundamental right to freedom of expression.
    Right to Life and Personal Liberty: The Court held that Section 377 violates human dignity, decisional automony and the fundamental right to privacy. Every individual has the liberty to choose their sexual orientation, seek companionship and exercise it within their private space.
    #NavtejSinghJauhar #Section377 #Homosexuality
    #lgbtq

Комментарии • 1

  • @R__chaudhary20
    @R__chaudhary20 29 дней назад

    Kitni pil compiled thi es case me navzot me ???