Modi government silent as Indian press lauds gay sex ruling
Modi admin initially opposed dismantling law, in July govt lawyers said they would give in to top court's "wisdom"
NEW DELHI:
Indian media on Friday hailed the country's Supreme Court ruling to decriminalise gay sex whilst highlighting a "deafening" silence from Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist government.
Banner front page headlines such as "Love at First Right", "Rainbow Nation" and "Independence Day" greeted the verdict of the top court to strike down the heart of Section 377, a law introduced by British rulers in 1861. The Modi-let government has yet to comment.
The conservative Hindu newspaper called the verdict "a reaffirmation of the right to love" and "a welcome departure from centuries of 'hetero-normative' thinking".
The judges had "furthered the frontiers of personal freedom and liberated the idea of personal rights from the pressure of public opinion," it added in an editorial.
The Hindustan Times warned that the lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, transgender community will still face condemnation from their families and colleagues.
"Harassment and violence will continue to occur," it warned.
"But if the long legal battle and the courage of queer people and communities are anything to go by, this fight for equal rights will not end. It will grow even stronger now that even the apex court has said there is no going back."
Modi's administration had initially opposed dismantling Section 377, though in July government lawyers said they would give in to the "wisdom" of the top court.
Justice DY Chandrachud said the government should have taken a categorical stand one way or the other instead of being ambivalent, the Hindu newspaper reported the judge as saying.
The Indian Express daily said the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party's silence on the issue was "deafening" and "deceptive".
India's main opposition Congress and other small regional parties have welcomed the verdict.
The BJP's ideological Hindu nationalist backer, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), said it does not consider homosexuality a crime but it did not support same-sex relations.
"Traditionally, Indian society does not accept such relations," it said in a statement.
Indian media on Friday hailed the country's Supreme Court ruling to decriminalise gay sex whilst highlighting a "deafening" silence from Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist government.
Banner front page headlines such as "Love at First Right", "Rainbow Nation" and "Independence Day" greeted the verdict of the top court to strike down the heart of Section 377, a law introduced by British rulers in 1861. The Modi-let government has yet to comment.
The conservative Hindu newspaper called the verdict "a reaffirmation of the right to love" and "a welcome departure from centuries of 'hetero-normative' thinking".
The judges had "furthered the frontiers of personal freedom and liberated the idea of personal rights from the pressure of public opinion," it added in an editorial.
The Hindustan Times warned that the lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, transgender community will still face condemnation from their families and colleagues.
"Harassment and violence will continue to occur," it warned.
"But if the long legal battle and the courage of queer people and communities are anything to go by, this fight for equal rights will not end. It will grow even stronger now that even the apex court has said there is no going back."
Modi's administration had initially opposed dismantling Section 377, though in July government lawyers said they would give in to the "wisdom" of the top court.
Justice DY Chandrachud said the government should have taken a categorical stand one way or the other instead of being ambivalent, the Hindu newspaper reported the judge as saying.
The Indian Express daily said the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party's silence on the issue was "deafening" and "deceptive".
India's main opposition Congress and other small regional parties have welcomed the verdict.
The BJP's ideological Hindu nationalist backer, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), said it does not consider homosexuality a crime but it did not support same-sex relations.
"Traditionally, Indian society does not accept such relations," it said in a statement.