A five-judge Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court on Thursday unanimously decriminalised part of the 158-year-old Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, which criminalised consensual “unnatural sex”.
A landmark judgment
‘Irrational, indefensible, manifestly arbitrary’
The LGBTQ community possesses the same constitutional rights as other citizens, said the 493-page judgment of the Bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra
‘A biological phenomenon… natural’
Discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation violated Articles 14, 15, 19, and 21 of the Constitution
In the world
Homosexual relations are legal in 25 countries besides India. But 72 nations and territories continue to criminalise it. In 45 such places, same-sex relations between women are also outlawed
The petitioners
A batch of writ petitions was filed by dancer Navtej Johar, journalist Sunil Mehra, chef Ritu Dalmia, hoteliers Aman Nath and Keshav Suri, business executive Ayesha Kapur, and 20 students of the IITs
What this judgment means
Other aspects of the law, which criminalises non-consensual sexual acts, bestiality, and “unnatural” sex with animals, will remain in force.
Same-sex civil union is still not allowed, though the law commission has recently advocated it
The road to equal rights
Section 377 was modelled after the 16th century Buggery Act of Britain
- July 2, 2009: The Delhi High Court (HC) legalised consensual same-gender sex for adults
- 2013: A two-judge SC Bench of G S Singhvi and S J Mukhopadhaya overturned the HC judgment, claiming fewer than 200 people had been prosecuted under the law
- 2015: Congress Lok Sabha member Shashi Tharoor disallowed by fellow parliamentarians from introducing a private member’s Bill to decriminalise homosexuality
- 2017: A nine-member SC Bench, ruling on the right to privacy, criticised the 2013 judgment