Same-Sex Marriage Court, Parliament and the Court of Public Opinion

  • Renuka Bisht
  • Times NetworkUpdated: May 27, 2024, 22:36 IST IST

If SC Agrees With Petitioners, The First-Step Legal Solution Is Not Complex. But Legislators Will Have A Lot Of Follow-Up Work And Must Engage With The Issue

When Supreme Court decriminalised homosexuality in 2018, one question loomed large. If homosexual persons had a right to live together without fearing the law, why shouldn’t the state recognise their right to marry? This is more than an academic question on rights, laws and justice. It is a deeply personal chasm in the lives of countless couples today.
Take Parth Phiroze Mehrotra and Uday Raj Anand, petitioners in one PIL asking SC for same-sex marriage rights. Their reasons are compelling. Uday is a legally recognised parent of two children through the surrogacy route. But his partner Parth, despite being the primary caregiver to the two children, doesn’t have official recognition as a parent. While the children have doting grandparents, cousins and a rich family experience, the absence of a legally recognised relationship with Parth “causes not only immense anguish but also significant practical problems”.
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