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Lok Sabha set to discuss Triple Talaq Bill on December 27, BJP issues whip to party MPs

In a landmark 3-2 verdict, the top court had found the practice of Triple Talaq as un-Islamic and "arbitrary". 

Lok Sabha set to discuss Triple Talaq Bill on December 27, BJP issues whip to party MPs

NEW DELHI: The BJP on Tuesday issued a whip to its Lok Sabha members asking them to be present in the Lower House on December 27 when the Triple Talaq Bill will be taken up for discussion. The bill, which has faced resistance from several parties, is also likely to be put to vote on that day.

News agency ANI reported that a three-line whip has been issued to BJP Lok Sabha MPs asking them to be present in the House throughout the day on December 27.

A whip is a strict instruction to the Members of Parliament from their respective parties which necessitates their presence in the House and participates in the voting. 

Any breach of the whip has serious consequences including disciplinary action against the violators of the whip.

The fresh Triple Talaq Bill aims to make the practice of instant triple talaq among Muslims an offence under the Indian Penal Code (IPC) with the provision of three-year jail for the husband. 

The Bill, which was introduced in the Lok Sabha on December 17, will replace the ordinance issued by the Centre in September, banning the instant triple talaq.

With the Lok Sabha failing to function properly due to disruptions ever since the Winter Session began on December 11, Speaker Sumitra Mahajan had on last Friday chaired a meeting of the Rules Committee during which law to punish erring members with disciplinary action was favoured.

In that meeting, while referring to Congress leader Mallikarjun Kharge`s comments that his party was ready to discuss the instant Triple Talaq Bill on December 27, the Speaker had said, "I believe that on 27th the House will function smoothly."

The instant triple talaq was taken up in the Parliament in August last year after a five-judge bench of the Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional a law that allowed Muslim men to divorce their wives simply by uttering "talaq" three times in quick succession.

In a landmark 3-2 verdict, the Apex Court found the practice un-Islamic and "arbitrary", and disagreed that Triple Talaq was an integral part of religious practice. 

(With Agency inputs)