Delhi and Beyond

President gives assent to Haryana law declaring child marriages void

Published by
Patriot Bureau

President Droupadi Murmu has given her assent to a legislation of Haryana under which every child marriage that has been solemnised will be considered as “void ab initio” (having no legal effect from inception), thus making a marital relationship between a man and a girl aged between 15 and 18 years illegal.

The Prohibition of Child Marriage (Haryana Amendment) Bill, 2020 was enacted following a Supreme Court ruling.

The apex court had declared that the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012, being a special law, prevails over the Indian Penal Code, 1860 and sex with a minor wife aged between 15 and 18 years, in accordance with the prevailing exception 2 of section 375 of the IPC, is arbitrary and violative of the Constitution.

Accordingly, the apex court invalidated the existing exception 2 of section 375 of the IPC, under which sexual intercourse between a man and his wife aged between 15 and 18 years does not amount to the offence of rape as defined under section 375. But according to the provisions of section 6 of the POCSO Act, this falls within the definition of rape.

The Supreme Court has also observed that it would be wise for all the state legislatures to adopt the route taken by Karnataka to make child marriages void and thereby, ensure that sexual intercourse between a minor girl and her husband is a punishable offence under the POCSO Act and the IPC.

“Accordingly, the Prohibition of Child Marriage (Haryana Amendment) Bill, 2020 was enacted and the legislation has now received the presidential assent,” a home ministry official said.

The president has also given her assent to the Registration (Tamil Nadu Amendment) Bill, 2021 to further amend the Registration Act, 1908 to prevent registration of forged documents and impersonation and to cancel registrations done on the basis of forged documents.

Following the enactment of the Bill, the registrar could issue a show-cause notice asking why a registration shall not be cancelled and on a consideration of the reply, may cancel the registration and enter the cancellation in the relevant books and indices.

It has another provision that allows any person aggrieved by an order of the registrar to file an appeal with the inspector-general within 30 days of cancellation.

Currently, the provisions of the Registration Act, 1908 (Central Act XVI of 1908) do not empower the registering officer or any other authority to cancel a document once registered, even on the grounds of fraud and impersonation, causing grave hardship to those who have been cheated.

(With PTI inputs)

Follow us on:

Instagram: instagram.com/thepatriot_in/
Twitter: twitter.com/Patriot_Delhi
Facebook: facebook.com/Thepatriotnewsindia

Patriot Bureau

Published by
Patriot Bureau

Recent Posts

SC directs Delhi govt to take care of child with disputed paternity

Top court flags welfare concerns, asks Delhi government to assess child’s living conditions and ensure…

April 21, 2026

Delhi: 67-year-old woman tied, raped through the night by intoxicated son in Burari

Man, 36, arrested after elderly mother escapes and alerts family; assault followed domestic dispute and…

April 21, 2026

Two held for Rs 9 lakh share market investment fraud in Delhi

According to the police, the accused contacted victims and lured them into investing in the…

April 21, 2026

Rs 35 lakh e-commerce fraud busted in Delhi; two held with 14 iPhones

Police say delivery agent and accomplice siphoned off high-value consignments, with several stolen devices still…

April 21, 2026

Wanted criminal carrying Rs 15,000 reward injured in encounter, arrested: Delhi Police

Accused opens fire during interception in Amar Colony; injured in police retaliation and held before…

April 21, 2026

MCD charged over Rs 80 crore as environment compensation from commercial vehicles

Civic body collects over Rs 80 crore in ECC from 4 lakh commercial vehicles in…

April 21, 2026