In 2013, the Supreme Court had overturned the HC, finding it "legally unsustainable.
In
the judgment that revoked provision of Article
377 of the Indian Penal Code that criminalised consensual
same-sex relationships in September this year, Justice Indu Malhotra
wrote: “Members of the LGBT community and their family members are
owed an apology from society for being denied equal rights over the
years.”
The
road to the sexual rights of the LGBTQ
community being recognised in this country has been a bumpy one.
The
Delhi High Court (HC) had decriminalised homosexuality in 2009,
saying that the colonial era law was incompatible with Articles 14,
15 and 21 of the Constitution.
However,
in 2013, the Supreme Court had overturned the HC, finding it “legally
unsustainable”. Other challenges, however, remain.
There
is no legal provision for same-sex marriages, LGBTQ couples or
singles are still not allowed to adopt children, and discrimination
at jobs, education and at homes is still too common.
In
fact, even health care professionals have been accused of
discrimination towards people from the community, at times
classifying homosexuality as a mental health issue.
The
road ahead is as much a legal route as a social one. While legal
hurdles might now become relatively easier to overcome, deeply
entrenched social prejudices are more difficult to combat. Only a
society that fully embraces all sexual minorities can be expected to
apologise in earnest.
Article
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