The Indian government has filed a petition to the Supreme Court
arguing against its newly reinforced ban on homosexual acts, claiming
that the move "violated the principle of equality."
India's
Supreme Court ruled to uphold a colonial-era law that could punish
homosexual acts with long-term imprisonment on December 11th, a decision
that was criticized by many inside and outside of India.
India's government sent a review petition to the Supreme Court
requesting that it review the legal decision, calling the choice
"unsustainable," according to the Times of India.
The
petition claims that the Supreme Court ruling “suffers from errors
apparent on the face of the record, and is contrary to well-established
principles of law laid down by this court enunciating the width and
ambit of Fundamental Rights under Articles 14, 15 and 21 of the
Constitution," per Al Jazeera.
Union Minister for Communications & Information Technology Kapil Sibal Tweeted in favor of the petition today:
The Govt has filed the review petition on #377 in the Supreme Court today. Let's hope the right to personal choices is preserved.
— Kapil Sibal (@KapilSibal) December 20, 2013
The court's decision earlier in the month overturned a 2009 Delhi
High Court ruling that decriminalized gay sex, upholding instead a
colonial-age law that deemed such acts an "unnatural offence," wrote the BBC.
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