India’s Central Govt opposes gay marriages in SC, says it does not fit in ‘exclusively heterogenous institution’

Representative image of gay marriage on Unsplash/Renate Vanaga

New Delhi/IBNS: The central government on Monday reiterated its opposition to the gay marriages saying weddings are “exclusively heterogenous institution”, media reports said.

The government has said the court must refrain from making such “omnibus orders”.

The government said recognition of only heterogeneous marriages is not a discrimination because socio-legal relationships like marriage are conventionally “deeply rooted in the Indian social context” across all religions.

It further said as quoted by NDTV that marriage “is considered a sacrament in all branches of Hindu law. Even in Islam, though it is a contract, it is a sacred contract and a valid marriage is only between a biological male and a biological woman.”

As per a report by NDTV, the Centre, which called the petitions an “urban elitist views for the purpose of social acceptance”, said, “the court must take into account broader views and voices of all rural, semi-rural and urban populations, views of religious denominations keeping in mind personal laws as well, and customs governing the field of marriage together with its inevitable cascading effects on several other statutes.”

“It’s purely a matter of legislative policy under Entry 5 of List III of Schedule VII of the Constitution, which ought to be determined by the appropriate Legislature only,” the government said.

A five-judge Supreme Court bench comprising Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud will hear a batch of petitions seeking legal recognition of the same-sex marriage on Tuesday.

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