Dear Friends:

This article  gives up-to-date information about women's divorce law in India. 
It was published in India Ink, NY Times on 22 03 2012.


-bhuban


For Indian Women, Divorce a Raw Deal

By PAMPOSH RAINA

Saurabh Das/Associated Press
A divorce lawyer counsels a client in her office in New Delhi, in this April 7, 
2011 file photo.

Much has been written about divorce being on the rise in India, sometimes 
accompanied by hand-wringing about the egos and inflexibility of younger 
couples, who seem less willing than their parents to stay in marriages they are 
not happy with.
National statistics don’t exist on divorce in India, but some local records do 
show a rise. Still, some experts say the divorce rate in India continues to be 
artificially low, because of how biased the system is against women, who can be 
left financially destitute even if their husband is wealthy.
“Divorce rates have not increased as much as they should have,” said Kirti 
Singh, who practices family and property law in India.
The government is likely to consider a proposal later this week to amend the 
existing marriage laws in India. The amendment seeks to introduce the 
irretrievable breakdown of marriage, as a basis for couples to seek divorce. It 
also proposes to waive or reduce the “cooling-off period,” or mandatory waiting 
period before divorce can be granted, which can be six to 18 months. The 
Marriage Laws (Amendment) Bill 2010 was first introduced in the upper house of 
Parliament, or Rajya Sabha, in August 2010.
Ms. Singh, who says she has fought “thousands” of divorce cases in her 31-year 
career, is part of a group that proposes even more significant changes to 
India’s marital laws, including the introduction of a new legislation which 
will give women the right to marital property. If this legislation is passed, 
“women will become equal owners of property,” she said. “Within the existing 
system there is no such option for women.”
Women in India stay in failing marriages for many reasons, Ms. Singh said. Most 
of these emanate from the social and financial pressures that divorced women 
are left to face. The courts can take several years to settle a case and often 
women cannot afford the several rounds of litigation involved. Even if a woman 
does go to the court, in most cases it is an “uneven fight” between a man and a 
woman, she said.
“Men have more access” to the legal system in India, Ms. Singh said.
Under the Indian legal system, a separation or divorce entitles a woman to 
“maintenance” from her spouse, in the form of financial support. The amount 
requires authorization from a court and is based on the income of the man. But 
it is the woman who has to produce evidence of her spouse’s earnings before the 
court.
In India, where tax authorities estimate just 3 percent of the population pays 
personal income tax, and “black money” or under-the-table cash is common, the 
man’s actual earnings are often hidden, Ms. Singh says. Additionally, the wife 
may not have access to documents that prove what her husband earns, Ms. Singh 
says. Even if she does, the maintenance amounts are tiny.
Citing courtroom experience, Ms. Singh says judges generally fix a share of 2 
percent to 10 percent of the husband’s annual earnings for maintenance amounts.
When a woman leaves a marriage, unless she is very well to do, “there is very 
little left to her,” to be able to sustain herself, Ms. Singh notes. The 
property goes to the person in whose name it is, and in most cases assets are 
in the name of a man, she points out.
While most recent media reports have focused on changing social values behind 
most divorces, a study authored by Ms. Singh to be published later this year 
finds more than 80 percent of the more than 400 separated or divorced women 
surveyed blame “cruelty or domestic violence in their marital homes,” for their 
split. Two-thirds of the women surveyed suffered from physical violence.
The most common reasons for domestic violence were “dowry demands, 
extra-marital affairs or a second marriage of the spouse and the suspicious 
nature of the spouse,” the report states. The violence took place even though 
87.92 percent of the women lived in extended families.
The study, called “The Economic Rights & Entitlements of Separated and Divorced 
Women India,” was conducted by a team of researchers, women’s rights activists 
and lawyers, for the Economic Research Foundation of India between October 2008 
and September 2009 and will be published later this year. It surveyed 405 
Indian women who were either separated or divorced or deserted. The women were 
randomly selected from cities, towns and villages in north, east, south and 
west of India in an attempt to understand what happens to women when marriages 
fail.
Most women surveyed “did not want a divorce even if they have faced violence in 
their marital homes as they feel both financially and socially insecure outside 
the marriage,” the study finds.
A large number of women “live at the mercy of their husbands during the 
subsistence of marriage” and even after a separation or divorce they are 
financially dependent on their natal family, the report states.
The study points out : “Not giving a divorce is also the only tool that 
separated women have to negotiate terms of settlement with their spouse as 
their legal rights are insignificant.” This is corroborated by the statistic, 
which shows that only 73 out of 405, or 18 percent women surveyed were divorced 
while 81.7 precent were separated.
In more than 60 percent of the cases, women claimed that marriage affected 
their career opportunities, because they either could not work after marriage 
or were able to work in a limited capacity. In about 85 percent of the cases, 
separated women “bear the burden of looking after their children single-handed

 
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