New Delhi: A bill seeking to criminalise instant triple talaq among Muslims and providing for a three-year jail term was cleared by the Union Cabinet on Friday.

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The Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Bill, 2017 got the Cabinet nod at a meeting chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Union Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad refused to give details of the bill at a media briefing on the ground that Parliament was in session. He merely said many state governments, to whom the draft of the bill was sent, had supported the bill. 


Following are the top developments:

- According to the draft Bill sent out to states earlier this month, it was proposed that triple talaq be made a cognisable and non-bailable offence that would attract a jail term of three years.


- The draft law was prepared in the backdrop of the August 22 verdict of the Supreme Court striking down the practice of "instant" triple talaq as illegal.

- However, it is understood that the Bill provides for a three-year imprisonment and fine to a Muslim man if he resorts to the practice of instant divorce, which a five-judge bench of the SC had held as "unconstitutional and arbitrary". The court had also held that triple talaq was not integral to Islam.

- The bill, while making instant divorce a cognisable and non-bailable offence, also seeks to give the affected women right to seek maintenance.


- It is expected to be introduced during the Winter Session of Parliament that commenced on Friday. 

- The Cabinet clearance was criticised by the All India Muslim Personal Law Board as a direct attack on the religious freedom of the Muslim community, while women activists sought the collective support of political parties in converting the Bill into law.

- Opposing the bill, AIMPLB member Maulana Khalid Rashid said, "As far as the compensation for the rehabilitation of the women is concerned, they are already being given by the Muslim community. So, the triple talaq bill, we consider as a direct interference in the religious matters of the largest community. It is an attack on religious freedom. Women are not being tortured in the name of triple talaq. Muslim women have said they do not want change in the personal law including the law of triple talaq. If certain people are misusing certain laws it doesn't mean that you will completely finish that law. It is part of our 'sharia'. The government should at least have consulted Muslim organisations before making any such law."

- Activist Zakir Soman said the Muslim Personal Law Board and the Muslim community are not taking proper care of triple talaq victims, and such women should be given justice as per law. "If the community and the Personal Law Board was doing enough why would be the women (triple talaq victims) be coming to women's organisation?" asked Soman.


- Another women activist Hina Zaheer said, "According to the Quran, there is no provision for instant talaq... So, it should not be the matter of ego for the Muslim Personal Law Board. The board should have solved it by themselves. They haven't solved it, that is why lot of politics is being done over the issue." 


(With IANS inputs)