People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXIX
No. 05 January 30, 2005 |
MEETING the union law minister at New Delhi, on January 18, a delegation of national organisations of women made an appeal for comprehensive reforms to ensure equal property rights for women. The delegation comprised Brinda Karat and Kirti Singh (AIDWA), Primila Loomba (NFIW), Mary Khemchand (YWCA), Sadhana (CWDS), and Husna Subhani and Janaki Devi (JWP).
The
delegation congratulated the law minister for his initiative for the
much-awaited reform to include women as co-parceners under the Hindu Succession
Act and to give women equal right for division of property. Ever since the
sabotage of the Hindu code reform in 1956, women have been denied equal rights
as co-parceners to ancestral property. The delegation therefore hailed the
proposed reform as a step forward. The delegation, however, pointed out certain
infirmities in the bill. The delegation pointed out that the proposed amendment
that “married daughters” would be excluded from the purview of the amendment
is violative of the earlier section of making females co-parceners. The minister
called for the papers and, after studying them, agreed that there was an error
in the draft, which would have to be corrected. He assured the delegation that
the rights of married daughters with prospective effect would be protected by
deletion of the ambiguously worded section.
The
delegation further pointed out that the entire Mitakshara system is an
anachronism, based on inequalities at different levels between men and women,
between elder and younger sons, between heirs of the deceased and so on. The
Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) is used mainly for tax benefits and that too only
by an insignificant number of people. The delegation urged the law minister to
take the logical step of reform by deleting the clause in the Hindu Succession
Act (HSA) that protects the Mitakshara system. Equally important, the proposed
amendments have a grave weakness in that they do not address the crucial issue
of women’s equal rights to agricultural property. At present, under certain
state laws as in Delhi, UP, Punjab and Haryana, women do not have the right to
agricultural property and the laws in these states have overriding jurisdiction
over the HSA. It is therefore necessary to make amendments in the HSA to ensure
that agricultural property is also covered.
The
delegation also urged the law minister to move a general clause to prevent
discrimination against women in the wills made with regard to self- acquired
property.
The
law minister made a categorical commitment to remove the infirmities insofar as
the issue of extension of the HSA to agricultural land is concerned.
The
delegation has decided to approach all members of the Standing Committee of the
ministry to ensure further steps for equal rights to women in property, as
suggested in the memorandum. (INN)