In what could lend more heft to the fight for their rights, leading lights of the LGBT community have moved the Supreme Court seeking quashing of Section 377 of IPC to protect their sexual preferences, saying these are part and parcel of the right to life.
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The petition by dancer N S Johar, journalist Sunil Mehra, chef Ritu Dalmia, hotelier Aman Nath and business executive Ayesha Kapur will come up for hearing before a bench of Justices S A Bobde and Ashok Bhushan on June 29, when the SC resumes business after a 45-day vacation. Leading lawyers Kapil Sibal and Arvind Datar will argue for the petitioners.
Their writ plea will give fresh impetus to the pending petitions-by Naz Foundation and gay rights sympathizers like film-maker Shyam Benegal.
After refusing twice to entertain pleas against Section 377, which criminalizes homosexuality, the SC had on February 2 referred the issue to a 5-judge bench, saying "important constitutional issues" have been raised in the curative petitions.
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The present petition changes the contours of a decade-and-a-half old legal fight on two counts. One, well-known LGBT personalities who have till now lived in fear of social persecution have overcome the fear of public humiliation to assert their sexual preference. Second, this is the first time people who are directly aggrieved by Section 377 have challenged its constitutional validity.
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Naz Foundation had filed a petition in December 2001 in the Delhi high court which, on July 2, 2009, decriminalized Section 377 by ruling that no adult would be prosecuted by law for indulging in consensual sex in private with another adult irrespective of their gender. One Suresh Kumar Koushal challenged the HC verdict in the Supreme Court which, on December 11, 2013, upheld the constitutional validity of Section 377 and set aside the HC's concession to the LGBT community. On January 28, 2014, the SC dismissed petitions seeking a review of its decision. Naz Foundation's curative petition has been admitted and referred to a 5-judge bench by the SC.
The petitioners said their lives have been "inexorably constricted and their rights infringed" by Section 377.?
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Their 716-page petition, including annexures, was painstakingly drafted by a team of lawyers, including Saurabha Kripal, Arundhati Katju, Himanshu Suman and Menaka Guruswamy.
The petitioners said Section 377 impedes the LGBT community members' right to be open with their friends, family, colleagues and employees.?
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We have repeatedly argued that Section 377 has no place in the statutes of a modern, liberal society. The state has no business dictating the sexual orientation of consenting adults. The Delhi high court has in the past shown that the courts can read down the section to decriminalise gay sex.?
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But the ideal solution is not a mere reading down of the section. The legislature should recognise that the law needs to go and should repeal it. The government should initiate such a step by moving a bill to remove gay sex from the purview of Section 377 and all parties and MPs should pass it.