Thiruvananthapuram:Senior BJP leader and former union minister Prakash Javadekar on Friday said that the Uniform Civil Code (UCC) is not a religious issue but a matter of equal rights, justice and dignity for women and condemned the attitude of opposition parties objecting to its implementation.
Addressing reporters at the state party headquarters here, he said many Muslim-dominated nations are following the practice of following a common civil code and it is "so natural throughout the world". Indonesia, Sudan, Turkey, Bangladesh and several other countries have the common civil code, and in India, it has already been in practice in Goa and Puducherry, he pointed out.
Javadekar, the Kerala prabhari (in-charge) of the BJP, also claimed that there has not been a single complaint from Muslims or any others with regard to the UCC in Goa and Puducherry in these decades. "When Puducherry Muslims and others are accepting it and practising it without any complaint, why should that not be the law," he asked.
There is one criminal law for all and there should be one civil law for all as well, he further said. Stating that the UCC is not a "BJP innovation", he said this is Article 44 of the Constitution written by Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar. The Constitution makers had written that, after a certain time, all directive principles should be converted into law, he said, adding that the Supreme Court also gave judgments and directions in this regard.
He also pointed out the anguish expressed by the apex court in the Shah Bano case that Article 44 of the Constitution had remained a dead letter. Javadekar further explained that the UCC is essentially about marriage, divorce, adoption and so on. "This is for everyone but women are suffering more due to these," he said.