New Delhi:Sexual intercourse between husband and wife cannot be labelled rape and at worst such an act of wrongdoing can be called sexual abuse, and a wife cannot compel the prescription of a particular punishment against her husband to satisfy her ego, an intervenor said in the Delhi High Court on Tuesday. Counsel for the intervenor NGO, Hriday, told the court, which is hearing a batch of petitions to criminalise marital rape, that in the marital sphere, sexual wrongdoing amounted to sexual abuse which was included under the definition of cruelty under section 3 of the Domestic Violence Act and indicated any conduct of a sexual nature that abuses, humiliates, degrades or otherwise violates the dignity of woman.
Counsel R K Kapoor, representing Hriday, emphasized that the marital rape exception aimed to protect the institution of marriage and was not arbitrary or in violation of Articles 14, 15 or 21 of the Constitution. Parliament does not say that such an act is not sexual abuse (any conduct of a sexual nature) but has taken it on a different plane to save the institution of marriage.
"Wife cannot compel the Parliament to prescribe a particular punishment against the husband to satisfy her ego. The only difference in Section 376 IPC and Domestic Violence Act is the quantum of punishment, though the act of sexual abuse in both the cases has been deprecated, the lawyer stated. Sexual intercourse between husband and wife in marital relationship cannot be labelled as rape and at the worst, it can be called sexual abuse only, which would be clear from the definition of cruelty as defined under Domestic Violence Act 2005, he submitted.
The bench of Justices Rajiv Shakdher and C Hari Shankar is hearing PILs filed by NGOs RIT Foundation, All India Democratic Women's Association, a man and a woman seeking striking down of the exception granted to husbands under the Indian rape law. The petitioners have challenged the Constitutionality of the marital rape exception under section 375 IPC (rape) on the ground that it discriminated against married women who are sexually assaulted by their husbands.
In an earlier hearing, the court had questioned that when the rape law granted no exemption in case of forced intercourse with a sex worker who chooses to withdraw consent at a belated stage, why a wife should be less empowered. Kapoor submitted that any comparison between the two was an insult to the institution of marriage and there cannot be any comparison between them as there is no emotional relationship in the case of a sex worker.