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'Live-in Relationships Causing Rise in Sexual Offences': Madhya Pradesh HC

PTI
Apr 20, 2022
The court also said that live-in relationships are "engulfing the ethos of Indian society" and are "promoting lascivious behaviour".

Indore: The “bane of live-in relationships”, a “by-product” of rights conferred under Article 21 of the constitution, is giving rise to sexual offences and promoting promiscuity, the Madhya Pradesh high court has said.

Justice Subodh Abhyankar of the Indore bench of the high court made the observation while rejecting a pre-arrest (anticipatory) bail plea of a 25-year-old man accused of raping a woman.

In the order, dated April 12, the court said, “Taking note of the spurt of such offences in recent times arising out of live-in relationships, this court is forced to observe that the bane of live-in-relationships is a by-product of constitutional guarantee, as provided under Article 21, engulfing the ethos of Indian society, and promoting lascivious behaviour, giving further rise to sexual offences.”

Article 21 guarantees the right to life and personal liberty. The courts, over the years, have widened its ambit to cover many things including the right to dignity and privacy.

Highlighting the rise in legal disputes arising out of live-in relationships, the high court said, “Those who wanted to exploit this freedom are quick to embrace it, but are totally ignorant that it has its own limitations, and does not confer any right on any of the partners to such relationship.”

The case diary and documents revealed that the complainant woman got pregnant more than twice and aborted the foetus under pressure from the applicant (her then live-in partner), the court noted.

Watch: Hamara Samvidhan: The Meaning of ‘Life’ and ‘Personal Liberty’

When their relationship fell apart, the woman got engaged to some other person, but the applicant, “being a jilted lover” resorted to blackmailing her, the judge said.

The applicant even sent video messages to the would-be in-laws of the woman wherein he threatened to commit suicide and said that they would also be held responsible for it, the court noted.

This led to the cancellation of the woman’s marriage, the high court said, citing the prosecution’s case.

Amit Singh Sisodia argued on behalf of the state government in this case.

(PTI)

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