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Karnataka HC’s bold statement on marital rape doesn’t strike down the exception

Amrutha PagadMarch 24, 2022 | 16:56 IST

The Karnataka High Court’s judgment in a marital rape case on March 23, 2022, was well received and touted to be progressive. The single-judge bench of Justice M Nagaprasanna said, “A man is a man; an act is an act; rape is a rape, be it performed by a man the ‘husband’ on the woman ‘wife’.”

Karnataka High Court's statement on Marital Rape. Illustration: Seemon/DailyO

The court refused to quash the case of marital rape against the man, in this case, the husband of the woman, and forced him to face trial. The case had reached the High Court after a trial court took cognizance of the offense under Section 376, which is rape.

India is among some 30 countries in the world that in the 21st century doesn’t see rape in marriages as a crime. In most other 150 countries, marital rape is criminalised. IPC Section 375 that defines rape also outlines a crucial exemption. It says, “Sexual intercourse or sexual acts by a man with his own wife, the wife not being under eighteen years of age, is not rape.”

This means that a ‘no’ is not a ‘no’ or is void in marriages. A man can force his wife into sexual intercourse even without her consent. It is also a form of domestic violence with far more consequences that is not legally recognised or criminalised. A man can unleash violence through sexual intercourse, physically hurting the woman. But nonetheless, it is still not a crime in India as long as the duo is married.

And hence the judgment of the Karnataka High Court was praised. However, the judgment doesn’t mean that the husband will be punished or that the order can be used in future such cases to shape the verdict. The court did not explicitly strike down the marital rape exception as defined under IPC Section 375. An appeal by the accused in a higher court is likely to quash all charges, especially that of rape, against the man.

Moreover, the single judge bench referred to the case as that of a specific one, where the man kept his wife as a sex slave and committed brutal acts of sexual violence against her, making it difficult to be replicated in other cases of marital rape.

Over the years, different High Courts have held different views and stands on the issue. In 2021, the Kerala High Court granted a divorce on the grounds of marital rape, but again it wasn’t used to punish the perpetrator.

If you think marital rape is rare and limited to some cases, then take a look at the NFHS-4 data for 2015-16. The survey showed that nearly 31% of married women – that is one in three married women – suffered physical, sexual and emotional violence at the hands of their husbands. The survey also said that 83% of married women (15-49 years of age) who have ever suffered sexual violence said that their perpetrator was a current or former spouse.

The exception is archaic and regressive. But the government of India has still not woken up to the horrors being meted out on half of the population. And it will take more than a well-put High Court statement to bring an end to the violence.

Last updated: March 24, 2022 | 17:03
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