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  Target triple talaq, act slowly on UCC

Target triple talaq, act slowly on UCC

Published : Oct 15, 2016, 12:23 am IST
Updated : Oct 15, 2016, 12:23 am IST

Some well-known Muslim organisations, such as the All India Muslim Personal Law Board and the Jamiat-ulema-Hind, are breathing fire on the issue of having a Uniform Civil Code (UCC) for the country su

Some well-known Muslim organisations, such as the All India Muslim Personal Law Board and the Jamiat-ulema-Hind, are breathing fire on the issue of having a Uniform Civil Code (UCC) for the country superseding the Sharia-based personal law governing marriage, divorce, succession and inheritance that Muslim communities are guided by.

This is unnecessary and unreasonable. The AIMPLB has said the government was waging “war” on the Muslims of India. This amounts to sensationalising an issue on which all arguments are decades old. On a Supreme Court reference, the Law Commission had proposed nationwide consultations on the question of “triple talaq”, which is agitating many Muslim women across India, and also wondered if stakeholders would offer their views on the question of having a common civil code.

The AIMPLB is free to dismiss the Law Commission’s questionnaire and not respond to it. But it must be clearly understood that the Law Commission is not the government. In any case, a political party like the Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (MIM) of Hyderabad has elected to respond to the questionnaire, in the course of which it will doubtless voice its opposition to UCC. The AIMPLB could have chosen a similar course.

But it has opted for the agitational approach. Perhaps this is more to sound militant about its rejection of “triple talaq”, a matter which is before the Supreme Court. This issue has agitated many, including elements within the Muslim community, as it is easily identified with the rights of women and their treatment at the hands of patriarchal institutions which wish to carry on with medieval-era practices.

It might be best, of course, if the triple talaq issue can be compartmentalised from the wider issue of UCC. There could be wide cross-community support for such a move. But political, social, administrative and legal acumen will be called for in a broad framework of goodwill.

These are very sensitive questions as Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi learnt to his cost on the Shah Bano issue in 1985. Liberals and many shades of secular opinion get strident in their demand for UCC. The Hindu right-wing, which had opposed the Hindu Code Bill in the 1950s which had sought to expunge the majority community’s religious practices of discrimination against women, is strident in demanding UCC, that in a basic way is aimed at changing the personal laws of the Muslim communities of India.

It is frequently heard that all citizens, regardless of their religion, should come under the same law. But this is already an accomplished fact. Except for personal laws, which are a minuscule part of our laws, the entire body of law in India is the same for all. And bringing in a UCC cannot be a top-priority national concern.