Indian Government Calls Criminalization of Marital Rape 'Excessively Harsh'.


The Indian government has refused to recognize marital rape as a criminal offense, stating that it is an "overly harsh" and "disproportionate" approach. This marks the first official statement from the government regarding the abolition of the exemption for marital rape.
The government explained that although a husband has no right to violate a wife's consent, recognizing such a violation as "rape" within a marriage is considered too severe a measure.
India remains one of three dozen countries worldwide where prosecuting marital rape is prohibited, alongside Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Saudi Arabia.
Arguments from Activists and the Government
Many activists and women's rights organizations emphasize that coerced sex is rape, regardless of who commits it. However, the Indian government, religious groups, and men's rights activists oppose any changes to the law. They argue that consent to sexual relations is "assumed" in marriage, and a wife cannot later withdraw it.
Protest Against Legislation in Iraq
A bill in Iraq that proposes allowing girls as young as nine to marry has sparked mass protests across the country. Activists claim it "legalizes child rape." Iraq already has a law prohibiting marriage before the age of 18, but it has been found that 28% of Iraqi girls marry before reaching adulthood.
Read also
- This maneuver is allowed, but drivers are often penalized: police explained the specifics of sign 4.5
- A helicopter has crashed into the Baltic Sea, seven passengers managed to survive
- A lion escaped from a zoo and attacked a man in a Turkish resort town
- American general spoke about Trump's temperament and advised how Ukrainians can win him over
- In Italy, a father kept his two children in a forest cabin for years, fearing the coronavirus
- Putin awarded the Hero of Russia title twice to the general who killed Ukrainians in Kyiv and Kursk