India Rejects Challenge to Anti-Gay Law
Gay.com UK,
January 5, 2005
By Ben Townley
A challenge to India’s legal system, which outlaws gay
acts, has been dismissed by the high court in Delhi.
The challenge, organized by the Naz Foundation, sought to
make homosexuality legal. At present, the country still has a colonial-era law
that bans “unnatural criminal behavior.”
But those behind the foundation said this goes against
LGBT people’s human rights, and could hamper the fight against HIV/AIDS, as
well as affect their mental health.
It added that such laws were out of step with modern
living.
However, the high court ruled that the law should stand,
and dismissed the foundation’s petition. The court said the law could not be
challenged by the group, a voluntary organization that advises the country’s
sexual minorities on HIV and AIDS.
Previously, the government’s lawyers had argued that
the legislation was intended to protect the morality of Indian society, and
would continue to do so.
“While the right to respect for private and family life
is undisputed, interference by public authority in the interest of public
safety and protection of health and morals is equally permissible,” the BBC
quotes a government affidavit as saying.
The document added that legalizing homosexuality would
lead to a rise in “unnatural” activity.
Homosexuality is still illegal in many countries across
the world, including countries in East Africa and across southern Asia.
High-profile campaigns against anti-gay laws have been
seen in Egypt and Jamaica in recent years, although the majority of these have
been dismissed by the countries’ courts and governments.
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