
A five-judge constitution bench headed by Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud on Tuesday said the Supreme Court could not strike down the provisions of the Special Marriage Act and that Parliament should decide on the issue. However, it also issued directions to prevent discrimination against the queer community, recognise the right of transgender persons in heterosexual relationships to marry under the existing legal framework, and so on. "Inclusion is a long journey, and we are getting there," said Parmesh Shahani, head of Godrej DEI Lab, adding that be it in terms of innovation or profitability, companies have realised that inclusivity is the way to go. "While a clearer marriage equality verdict would be more helpful, companies that want to be progressive will continue being progressive," he said.

Yashwant Mahadik, president, global HR, at pharma major Lupin, said, "Things are progressing...Maybe it could have progressed faster, but this is not a setback. More and more companies are supporting LBGTQIA+ rights." In recent years, companies have been stepping up initiatives to make themselves more LGBTQIA+ friendly - from extending insurance cover to LGBTQIA+ partners to creating LGBTQIA+-friendly leave policies, employee resource groups, ally programmes, gender-neutral restrooms, support in gender reassignment surgeries and so on. "Companies will need to keep strengthening agenda on inclusivity," said Rajkamal Vempati, head HR at Axis Bank, which has in place: 'ComeAsYouAre', a charter of policies and practices for employees and customers from LGBTQIA+ community.
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