12-25-2006, 07:59 PM
NCW rejects proposal for punishing women for adultery
<b>A woman, even if she is involved in an illicit relationship, cannot be punished for adultery and is treated as the victim under law.</b>
And the National Commission for Women (NCW) has shot down proposals for amending Section 497 so that women can be prosecuted for adultery.
The Commission had been asked by the Centre to review Section 497 which does not envisage prosecution of the wife by the husband for adultery.
The section provides expressly that the wife shall not be punishable even as an abettor, based on the reasoning that the wife, who is involved in an illicit relationship with another man, is a victim and not the author of the crime.
According to NCW sources, the Commission does not feel that by merely prescribing punishment for women by amending Section 497, the marriage can be protected or saved.
The NCW has forwarded its recommendations to the government, in which it has stated that considering the relatively socially disempowered position of women, the Commission suggests no amendments to Section 497 of IPC.
<b>The existing provision in the IPC is based on the mindset that the wife is a personal possession of the husband, who is the sole aggrieved person in an incident of adultery.</b>
It has told the government that as the wife already can take action against her husband under various other legal provisions, such as Section 498A of IPC, there is no reason that she should be debarred from initiating prosecution under Section 198 of CRPC.
The wife, in such cases, ought to be the person aggrieved and competent to file a complaint under Section 198.
In another important recommendation, the Commission has said adultery should be treated as a civil wrong and not a criminal offence.
It is of the view that there may be many instances where the woman wants to save the marriage and sees the adulterous relationship as an aberration.
The issue of adultery should be viewed as a breach of trust and be treated as a civil wrong rather than as a criminal offence.
The NCW has, however, said this should be done only after a national consensus is formed on the issue.
<b>A woman, even if she is involved in an illicit relationship, cannot be punished for adultery and is treated as the victim under law.</b>
And the National Commission for Women (NCW) has shot down proposals for amending Section 497 so that women can be prosecuted for adultery.
The Commission had been asked by the Centre to review Section 497 which does not envisage prosecution of the wife by the husband for adultery.
The section provides expressly that the wife shall not be punishable even as an abettor, based on the reasoning that the wife, who is involved in an illicit relationship with another man, is a victim and not the author of the crime.
According to NCW sources, the Commission does not feel that by merely prescribing punishment for women by amending Section 497, the marriage can be protected or saved.
The NCW has forwarded its recommendations to the government, in which it has stated that considering the relatively socially disempowered position of women, the Commission suggests no amendments to Section 497 of IPC.
<b>The existing provision in the IPC is based on the mindset that the wife is a personal possession of the husband, who is the sole aggrieved person in an incident of adultery.</b>
It has told the government that as the wife already can take action against her husband under various other legal provisions, such as Section 498A of IPC, there is no reason that she should be debarred from initiating prosecution under Section 198 of CRPC.
The wife, in such cases, ought to be the person aggrieved and competent to file a complaint under Section 198.
In another important recommendation, the Commission has said adultery should be treated as a civil wrong and not a criminal offence.
It is of the view that there may be many instances where the woman wants to save the marriage and sees the adulterous relationship as an aberration.
The issue of adultery should be viewed as a breach of trust and be treated as a civil wrong rather than as a criminal offence.
The NCW has, however, said this should be done only after a national consensus is formed on the issue.