Express News Service
The Gujarat High Court on Thursday passed an interim order stating that the provisions of the Gujarat Freedom of Religion (Amendment) Act, 2021, will not apply to inter-faith marriages which take place without force, allurement or fraudulent means.
A division bench comprising Chief Justice Vikram Nath and Justice Biren Vaishnav passed the interim order to protect the parties of inter-faith marriage from being unnecessarily harassed by government and various organisations.
The court said that the Section 3, 4, 4A to 4C, 5, 6, and 6A of Gujarat Freedom of Religion (Amendment) Act, 2021 shall not operate merely because marriage is solemnized by a person of one religion with another religion without force or allurement or fraudulent means and such marriages cannot be termed as marriages for the purposes of unlawful conversion.
The bench passed the order in a writ petition filed by Jamiat Ulama-E-Hind and Muhahid Nafees challenging the provisions of the Gujarat Freedom of Religion (Amendment) Act, 2021.
After the order was pronounced, Advocate General Kamal Trivedi requested the bench to make a clarification that the provisions of the law will apply if the inter-faith marriage results in a forceful conversion.
The bench said that it has ordered that without any finding of force or fraud or allurement, the provisions cannot be implemented. “That’s all that we have said”, the bench said. Senior Advocate Mihir Joshi assisted by Advocate MTM Hakim had appeared for the petitioners. The Court had reserved the case for pronouncement of interim orders for today after detailed arguments on August 5 and 17
The Amendment Act was notified on April 1 this year, in the lines of “anti-love jihad” laws brought by the States of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh.
The Court has held that these said provisions will not apply to inter-faith marriages based on free consent by adults. The act was challenged as an invasion into personal autonomy, free choice, freedom of religion, and unlawful discrimination and hence violative of the fundamental rights under Articles 14, 21 and 25 of the Constitution. On August 5, the Court had heard arguments in the petition.
During the hearing, the bench had orally observed that religion and marriage were matters of personal choice. As per the stringent provisions of the Act, the moment a person makes an FIR against an inter-faith marriage, the person can be sent to jail. Also, the burden of proof is on the accused.
Objectionable provisions in Gujarat Freedom of Religion Amendment Act 2021:
The Section 3 of the Act prohibits forcible conversion from one religion to another by use of force or by allurement or by fraudulent means, however, now the amended Bill proposes to prohibit acts like forcible religious conversion by marriage or aiding a person to get married.
Section 3A enables any aggrieved person, his parents, brother, sister, or any other person related by blood, marriage or adoption may lodge an FIR with respect to an alleged unlawful conversion.
Section 4A prescribes punishment of imprisonment in the range of 3 to 5 years for unlawful conversion.
Section 4B declares marriages by unlawful conversion as void.
Section 4C deals with offences of organizations doing an unlawful conversion.
Section 6A places the burden of proof on the accused.