The Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 - Section 5 - A marriage solemnized
between a male and a transwoman, both professing Hindu religion, is a valid
marriage - the Registrar of Marriages is bound to register the same.
By holding
so, this Court is not breaking any new ground. It is merely stating the
obvious. Sometimes to see the obvious, one needs not only physical vision in
the eye but also love in the heart.
The Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 - Section 5 - the expression “bride' occurring in Section 5 of the Act will have to include within its meaning not only a woman but also a transwoman. It would also include an intersex person/transgender person who identifies herself as a woman. The only consideration is how the person perceives herself. [Para 15]
Any intersex child is entitled to and must stay within the folds of its family. The running away from the family to the margins and beyond is a fatal journey that must be arrested. Time has come when they are brought back from the margins into the mainstream. This is because even though the transgender community is having its own social institutions, the stories we hear are horrendous. The parents must be encouraged to feel that the birth of an intersex child is not a matter of embarrassment or shame. It lies in the hands of the Government to launch a sustained awareness campaign in this regard. Recent Tamil Films such as “Peranbu” where Mamooty marries a transgender and “Super Delux” where Vijay Sethupathi plays the role of a transgender and is also a parent to the child he has fathered are encouraging trends.
The Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 - Section 5 - the expression “bride' occurring in Section 5 of the Act will have to include within its meaning not only a woman but also a transwoman. It would also include an intersex person/transgender person who identifies herself as a woman. The only consideration is how the person perceives herself. [Para 15]
Any intersex child is entitled to and must stay within the folds of its family. The running away from the family to the margins and beyond is a fatal journey that must be arrested. Time has come when they are brought back from the margins into the mainstream. This is because even though the transgender community is having its own social institutions, the stories we hear are horrendous. The parents must be encouraged to feel that the birth of an intersex child is not a matter of embarrassment or shame. It lies in the hands of the Government to launch a sustained awareness campaign in this regard. Recent Tamil Films such as “Peranbu” where Mamooty marries a transgender and “Super Delux” where Vijay Sethupathi plays the role of a transgender and is also a parent to the child he has fathered are encouraging trends.
BEFORE THE MADURAI BENCH OF MADRAS HIGH COURT
CORAM : THE HONOURABLE MR.JUSTICE G.R.SWAMINATHAN
DATED : 22.04.2019
WP(MD)No.4125 of 2019 and WMP(MD)No.3220 of 2019
1. Arunkumar
2.Sreeja ... Petitioners
Vs.
1. The
Inspector General of Registration, No.100, Santhome High Road, Chennai – 600
028.
2. The
District Registrar, Tuticorin & District.
3. The Joint
Registrar No.II, O/o.Joint Registrar No.II, Tuticorin & District.
4. The
Secretary to Government, Health and Family Welfare Department, Government of
Tamil Nadu.
5. The
Director, Ambedkar Foundation, (an autonomous Body under the Ministry of Social
Justice and Empowerment), 15, Janapath, New Delhi – 110 001. ... Respondents (4th and 5th respondents are suo motu impleaded vide court order dated 29.03.2019)
PRAYER
: Writ Petition is filed under Article 226 of the
Constitution of India, to issue a Writ of Certiorarified Mandamus, to call for
the records pertaining to the order of proceedings of the third respondent in
No.1/2018 Na.Ka.No.187/2018 dated 16.11.2018 and the order of proceedings of
the second respondent in Na.Ka.No.5876/E2/2018 dated 28.12.2018 and quash the
same as illegal and consequently directing the respondents to register the
marriage which took place on Arulmighu Shangara Rameswara Temple, Tuticorin
dated 31.10.2018.
For
petitioners : Mrs.Sivasankari for Mr.M.Krishnaveni
For
Respondents 1 to 3 : Mr.M.Murugan, Government Advocate
O R D E R
A marriage
solemnized between a male and a transwoman, both professing Hindu religion, is
a valid marriage in terms of Section 5 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 and the
Registrar of Marriages is bound to register the same. By holding so, this Court
is not breaking any new ground. It is merely stating the obvious. Sometimes to
see the obvious, one needs not only physical vision in the eye but also love in
the heart.
2. Let us start with the facts
first. The first petitioner Shri.Arunkumar got married to the second petitioner
Ms.Srija on 31.10.2018 at Arulmighu Sankara Rameswara Temple, Tuticorin as per
Hindu rites and customs. The village administrative officer has certified that
this marriage was in fact performed and that it was not a bigamous one for
either. The temple authorities though permitted the performance of the marriage
declined to vouch for it. When the parties submitted a memorandum for
registration of marriage under Rule 5 (1) (a) of the Tamil Nadu Registration of
Marriages Rules in Form I before the third respondent, the third respondent
refused to register the same. Questioning the said decision taken by the third
respondent vide proceedings dated 16.11.2018, the petitioners herein filed an appeal
before the second respondent. The second respondent also vide proceedings in
Na.Ka.No.5876/E2/2018 dated 28.12.2018 confirmed the decision of the third
respondent. Challenging the refusal to register their marriage, the petitioners
have filed this writ petition.
3. The learned Government
Advocate appearing for the respondents 1 to 3 submitted that Section 7 of the
Tamil Nadu Registration of Marriages Act, 2009 confers power to the Registrar
of Marriages to refuse registration. He could do so if he is satisfied that the
marriage between the parties was not performed in accordance with the personal
laws of the parties, any custom or usage or tradition. As per Section 7 (1) (c)
of the Act, if the documents tendered before the Registrar of Marriages do not
prove the marriage status of the parties, he can refuse to register the
marriage. In this case, the authorities of the temple, where the marriage
between the parties was said to have been solemnized, had not issued any
certificate indicating the performance of the marriage. He further contended
that as per Section 5 of the Hindu Marriage Act, the bridegroom must have
completed the age of 21 years while the bride must have completed the age of 18
years at the time of marriage. To understand the meaning of expression “bride',
in the order impugned in this writ petition, Oxford Advance Learner's
Dictionary of Current English was referred to. The term “Bride” can only refer
to a “Woman on her wedding day”. In the case on hand, the second petitioner
Srija is a transgender and not a woman. Thus the statutory requirement set out
in Section 5 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 has not been fulfilled. Therefore,
the learned Government Advocate wanted this Court to sustain the orders
impugned in this writ petition and dismiss the writ petition.
4. I am unable to agree with
the stand of the learned Government Advocate appearing for the respondents 1 to
3. As rightly pointed out by the learned counsel appearing for the writ
petitioner, the issue on hand is no longer res
integra. In the decision reported in (2014) 5 SCC 438 (National Legal
Services Authority vs. Union of India), the
Hon'ble Supreme Court upheld the transgender persons' right to decide their
self identified gender. The central and State governments were directed to
grant legal recognition of their gender identity such as male, female or third
gender. This path breaking judgment has been cited with approval in the Nine
Judges Bench of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in the decision reported in (2017) 10 SCC 1 (Justice
K.S.Puttaswamy vs. Union of India) and again by
the Constitution Bench in the decision reported in (2018) 10 SCC 1 (Navtej Singh Johar
vs. Union of India).
5. The Hon'ble Supreme Court in
N.L.S.A Case noted that the existence of a third category outside the male -
female binary has been recognised in the indigenous Hindu tradition. According
to the renowned writer Devdutt Pattanaik in his book 'Jaya', in the great
Mahabharata war, Aravan came forward to sacrifice himself to ensure the victory
of Dharma. But, he insisted that he must have a wife who will weep for him when
he died. In keeping with the rules of the ritual, it was mandatory to fulfil
the last wish of the sacrificial victim. The Pandavas were obliged to get
Aravan married but no woman was willing to be his wife. Who would want to marry
a man doomed to die at sunrise?. When all attempts to get Aravan a wife failed,
Krishna rose to the occasion and transitioned himself into a female form known
as Mohini and married Aravan. The next day when Aravan was beheaded at dawn,
Krishna wept for him as a widow. This tale of Aravan's human sacrifice comes
from north Tamil Nadu's oral traditions where Aravan is worshipped as
Kuthandavar, a form of Shiva. Aravan's sacrifice is re-enacted each year
ritually where he becomes the divine husband of all men who have womanly
feelings. Through Aravan's mythology the existence of those who call themselves
Transgender is acknowledged, explained and validated.
6. Shikhandi is another
important character in Mahabharata. She was born as a female but grew up to be
a male. During the last year of exile, Pandavas had to hide their identity.
Arjuna is said to have assumed the form of a transgender. Lord Iyappa is also a
syncretic deity born of the union between Lord Shiva and Lord Vishnu who took
the form of Mohini. Ramayana also talks of an encounter between Lord Rama and
Transgenders. Rama is said to have specially blessed the community.
7. Now let us take a leap from
mythology and traditional lore to modern neuroscience. Professor
V.S.Ramachandran who has been lauded as “The Marco Polo of neuroscience” by
Richard Dawkins has this to say in his book 'The Tell-Tale Brain' :
“TRANSEXUALITY
: DOCTOR, I'M TRAPPED IN THE WRONG KIND OF BODY !
The self
also has a sex: You think of yourself as male or female and expect others to
treat you as such. It is such an ingrained aspect of your selfidentity that you
hardly ever pause to think about ituntil things go awry, at least by the
standards of a conservative, conformist society. The result is the “disorder”
called transsexuality.
As with
somatoparaphrenia, distortions or mismatches in the SPL can also explain the
symptoms of transsexuals. Many male-to-female transsexuals report feeling that
their penis seems to be redundant or, again, overpresent and intrusive. Many
female-to-male transsexuals report feeling like a man in a woman‘s body, and a
majority of them have had a phantom penis since early childhood. Many of these
women also report having phantom erections. In both kinds of transsexuals the
discrepancy between internally specified sexual body image— which,
surprisingly, includes details of sexual anatomy—and external anatomy leads to
an intense discomfort and, again, a yearning to reduce the mismatch.
Scientists
have shown that during fetal development, different aspects of sexuality are
set in motion in parallel: sexual morphology (external anatomy), sexual
identity (what you see yourself as), sexual orientation (what sex you are
attracted to), and sexual body image (your brain‘s internal representation of
your body parts). Normally these harmonize during physical and social
development to culminate in normal sexuality, but they can become uncoupled,
leading to deviations that shift the individual toward one or the other end of the
spectrum of normal distribution.
I am using
the words “norma” and “deviation” here only in the statistical sense relative
to the overall human population. I do not mean to imply that these ways of
being are undesirable or perverse. Many transsexuals have told me that they
would rather have surgery than be “cured” of their desire. If this seems
strange, think of intense but unrequited romantic love. Would you request that
your desire be removed? There is no simple answer.”
8. Sex and gender are not one
and the same. A person's sex is biologically determined at the time of birth.
Not so in the case of gender. That is why after making an exhaustive reference
to the human rights jurisprudence worldwide in this regard, the Hon'ble Supreme
Court held that Article 14 of the Constitution of India which affirms that the
State shall not deny to “any person” equality before the law or the equal
protection of the laws within the territory of India would apply to
transgenders also. Transgender persons who are neither male/female fall within
the expression “person” and hence entitled to legal protection of laws in all
spheres of State activity as enjoyed by any other citizen of this country.
Discrimination on the ground of sexual orientation or gender identity, therefore,
impairs equality before law and equal protection of law and violates Article 14
of the Constitution of India. (Vide Para Nos.61 and 62 of the NLSA case).
Article 19(1)(a) and Article 21 were expansively intrepreted so as to encompass
one's gender identity also. The following observations are particularly
relevant :
“72.Gender
identity, therefore, lies at the core of one's personal identity, gender
expression and presentation and, therefore, it will have to be protected Under
Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution of India. A transgender's personality
could be expressed by the transgender's behavior and presentation. State cannot
prohibit, restrict or interfere with a transgender's expression of such
personality, which reflects that inherent personality. Often the State and its
authorities either due to ignorance or otherwise fail to digest the innate
character and identity of such persons. We, therefore, hold that values of
privacy, self-identity, autonomy and personal integrity are fundamental rights
guaranteed to members of the transgender community Under Article 19(1)(a) of
the Constitution of India and the State is bound to protect and recognize those
rights.
73......
Article 21 protects the dignity of human life, one's personal autonomy, one's
right to privacy, etc. Right to dignity has been recognized to be an essential
part of the right to life and accrues to all persons on account of being
humans. .....
74.
Recognition of one's gender identity lies at the heart of the fundamental right
to dignity. Gender, as already indicated, constitutes the core of one's sense
of being as well as an integral part of a person's identity. Legal recognition
of gender identity is, therefore, part of right to dignity and freedom
guaranteed under our Constitution.
75....Self-determination
of gender is an integral part of personal autonomy and self-expression and
falls within the realm of personal liberty guaranteed Under Article 21 of the
Constitution of India.”
9. In the case on hand, the
second petitioner herein has chosen to express her gender identity as that of a
woman. As held by the Hon'ble Supreme Court this falls within the domain of her
personal autonomy and involves her right to privacy and dignity. It is not for
the State authorities to question this self determination of the second
petitioner herein.
10. The expression “bride”
occurring in Section 5 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 cannot have a static or
immutable meaning. As noted in Justice G.P.Singh's Principles of Statutory
Interpretation, the court is free to apply the current meaning of a statute to
present day conditions. A statute must be interpreted in the light of the legal
system as it exists today. Article 16 of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights reads as under :
“Article
16.(1) Men and women of full age, without any limitation due to race,
nationality or religion, have the right to marry and to found a family. They
are entitled to equal rights as to marriage, during marriage and at its
dissolution.
(2) Marriage
shall be entered into only with the free and full consent of the intending
spouses.
(3) The
family is the natural and fundamental group unit of society and is entitled to
protection by society and the State.”
In (2018) 16
SCC 368 (Shafin Jahan vs. Asokan K.M. and Ors), the right to marry a person of
one's choice was held to be integral to Article 21 of the Constitution of
India.
11. In (2017) 10 SCC 1 (Justice
K.S.Puttaswamy vs. Uniona of India), the
Hon'ble Supreme Court after referring to the legal position obtaining in USA, held
as follows :
“194. In
Obergefell v. Hodges 576 US - (2015), the Court held in a 5:4 decision that the
fundamental right to marry is guaranteed to same-sex couples by both the Due
Process Clause and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Justice Kennedy authored the majority opinion (joined by Justices Ginsburg,
Breyer, Sotamayor and Kagan):
Indeed, the
Court has noted it would be contradictory to recognize a right of privacy with
respect to other matters of family life and not with respect to the decision to
enter the relationship that is the foundation of the family in our society.”
12. In NLSA Case also, the right
of the transgender person to marry was recognised. Paragraph No.119 of the said
Judgment read as follows :
“119.Therefore,
gender identification becomes very essential component which is required for
enjoying civil rights by this community. It is only with this recognition that
many rights attached to the sexual recognition as 'third gender' would be
available to this community more meaningfully viz. the right to vote, the right
to own property, the right to marry, the right to claim a formal identity
through a passport and a ration card, a driver's license, the right to
education, employment, health so on.”
13. For too long, the
transgender persons/intersex people have been languishing in the margins. The
Constitution of India is an enabling document. It is inviting them to join the
mainstream. Therefore, it would be absurd to deny the transgenders the benefit
of the social institutions already in place in the mainstream. In Karnataka,
Akkai Padmashali, a transgender activist could officially register her marriage
with V.Vasudev and receive the certificate in the matter of few hours in
January, 2017. V.Vasudev who is also is working with LGBTQI+ activists stated
that they do not see Akkai as a transwoman but as a woman. But in State of
Tamil Nadu which has been lauded and praised by the Supreme Court for its
progressive measures in the NLSA judgement, there is a refusal by the
authorities to recognise the validity of the marriage that has taken place
between the petitioners herein.
14. Both the petitioners herein
profess Hindu Religion. Their right to practice Hindu Religion is recognised
under Article 25 of the Constitution of India. The Hindu Marriage Act is a
personal law of the Hindus. When the right of the transgender persons to marry
has been upheld by the Hon'ble Supreme Court, in the very nature of things,
they cannot be kept out of the purview of the Hindu Marriage Act. One can have
a civil marriage. One can also have a sacramental marriage. The petitioners'
marriage was solemnized in a temple. Therefore, their fundamental right under
Article 25 has also been infringed in this case.
15. Seen in the light of the
march of law, the expression “bride' occurring in Section 5 of the Hindu
Marriage Act, 1955 will have to include within its meaning not only a woman but
also a transwoman. It would also include an intersex person/transgender person
who identifies herself as a woman. The only consideration is how the person
perceives herself.
16. This Court must at this
juncture place on record its gratitude to the intersex activist Gopi Shankar of
Madurai. This Court had occasion to come across his work and it has been a
humbling and enlightening experience. Beyond the man-woman binary, there are as
many as 58 gender variants. Of course, we use the expression “transgender” as
an umbrella term. When a child is born it is usually endowed with male
genitalia or female genitalia. But there are children who are born with a
genitalia that belongs to neither category. They are known as intersex
children. They must be given their time and space to find their true gender
identity. But the parents make the infant undergo sex reassignment surgery
(SRS). When Gopi Shankar took up the matter with NHRC, it forwarded the
complaint to the Health Ministry. The reply from the Health Ministry makes a
strange reading. It is worthwhile to extract it verbatim. It reads as under :
“F.No.Z-28015/15/2017-MH-1
Government of India
Ministry of Health & F.W
Directorate General of Health Services
Nirman Bhawan,
New Delhi – 110 108
Dated : 25.01.2017
To, Shri Gopi Shankar M Executive Director, Srishti
Madurai Student Volunteer Educational Research Foundation, Sri SaradaDham, Plot
No.2, 4/413-A, Bama Nagar, 2nd
Street, Thapal Thanthi Nagar,
Madurai – 625017.
Subject : Requesting the NHRC to ban the forced sex
selective surgeries & medical abuse on Intersex babies in India & to
recognise Intersex people's fundamental rights in India.
Sir,
I am
directed to refer to your letter dated 07.11.2016 addressed to the Chairman,
NHRC on the above noted subject and to convey that so far as your concerns
regarding health are concerned, the medical fraternity is well aware of the
existence of Intersex persons in the community as they study this subject as
part of medical curriculum. Also, any kind of invasive medical procedure
including sex reassignment surgeries are done only after thorough assessment of
the patient, obtaining justification for the procedure planned to be conducted
with the help of appropriate diagnostic test and only after taking a written
consent of the patient/guardian. Further, medical fraternity is bound to
provide medical services to all without any discrimination on any grounds
whatsoever.
Any isolated case regarding lack of awareness,
discrimination by a medical practitioner or unscrupulous act on the part of a
medical practitioner may be brought to the notice of the appropriate
authorities of the respective State Government for necessary action.
Rest of the issues raised in the representation are
largely social in nature and may be taken up with the Ministry of Social
Justice & Empowerment.
Yours faithfully,
(Dr.Anil Sain)
Addl.Deputy Director General (AS)”
17. The consent of the parent
cannot be considered as the consent of the child. Justice K.Chandru in the
decision reported in (2007) 2 CTC 97 observed as follows :
“35. Ultimately, neither the father nor the mother can claim suzerainty over
the child and in the ultimate analysis, the children are not the children of
their parents. The said situation has been beautifully portrayed by Kahlil
Gibran on The Prophet [Rupa & Co : 17th Edition : 2006],
"Your
children are not your children.
They are the
sons and daughters of Life's
longing for
itself.
They come
through you but not from you,
And though
they are with you yet they belong
not to you.
You may give
them your love but not your
thoughts,
For they
have their own thoughts.
You may house
their bodies but not their souls,
For their
souls dwell in the house of tomorrow,
which you
cannot visit, not even in your
dreams.
You may
strive to be like them, but seek not to
make them
like you.
For life
goes not backward nor tarries with
yesterday.
You are the
bows from which your children as
living
arrows are sent forth.
Let your
bending in the Archer's hand be for
gladness;"
18. The World Health
Organization has published a report titled “Sexual Health, Human Rights and the
Law”. It calls for a deferment of intersex genital mutilation (IGM) until the
intersex persons are old enough to make decisions for themselves. The following
extract from the said report would speak for itself :
“Intersex
people may face discrimination and stigma in the health system, in many cases
being subjected to lack of quality of care, institutional violence and forced
interventions throughout their lifetime....
A major
concern for intersex people is that socalled sex normalizing procedures are
often undertaken during their infancy and childhood, to alter their bodies,
particularly the sexual organs, to make them conform to gendered physical
norms, including through repeated surgeries, hormonal interventions and other
measures. As a result, such children may be subjected to medically unnecessary,
often irreversible, interventions that may have lifelong consequences for their
physical and mental health, including irreversible termination of all or some
of their reproductive and sexual capacity. Medical procedures may sometimes be
justified in cases of conditions that pose a health risk or are considered
life-threatening. Such procedures, however, are sometimes proposed on the basis
of weak evidence, without discussing and considering alternative solutions....
Increasingly,
concerns are being raised by intersex people, their caregivers, medical
professionals and human rights bodies that these interventions often take place
without the informed consent of the children involved and/or without even
seeking the informed consent of their parents....... Parents often consent to
medical intervention for their children in circumstances where full information
is lacking and without any discussion of alternatives...
According to
human rights standards, intersex persons should be able to access health
services on the same basis as others, free from coercion, discrimination and
violence.....Human rights bodies and ethical and health professional
organizations have recommended that free and informed consent should be ensured
in medical interventions for people with intersex conditions, including full
information, orally and in writing, on the suggested treatment, its
justification and alternatives...
These
organizations have also recommended that medical and psychological professionals
should be educated and trained about physical, biological and sexual diversity
and integrity, and that they should properly inform patients and their parents
of the consequences of surgical and other medical interventions and provide
additional support... It has also been recommended that investigation should be
undertaken into incidents of surgical and other medical treatment of intersex
people without informed consent and that legal provisions should be adopted in
order to provide remedies and redress to the victims of such treatment....”
19. In fact, the Hon'ble Supreme
Court in NLSA case categorically stated that no one shall be forced to undergo
medical procedures, including SRS, sterilisation or hormonal theraphy, as a
requirement for legal recognition of their gender identity. But, what is
happening in reality is more in breach of this judgement given by the Hon'ble
Supreme Court. Article 39 (f) of the Constitution of India reads as follows :
The State
shall, in particular, direct its policy towards securing that children are
given opportunities and facilities to develop in a healthy manner and in
conditions of freedom and dignity and that childhood and youth are protected
against exploitation and against moral and material abandonment.
20. Since it has come to the
notice of this Court that the mandate issued by the Hon'ble Supreme Court is
not being honoured, this Court has to necessarily direct the Government of
Tamilnadu to issue a Government Order enshrining the aforesaid mandate of the Hon'ble
Supreme Court so as to effectively ban sex reassignment surgeries on intersex
infants and children. The fourth respondent is directed to file a compliance
report before the Registry within a period of eight weeks from the date of
receipt of a copy of this order.
21. Any intersex child is
entitled to and must stay within the folds of its family. The running away from
the family to the margins and beyond is a fatal journey that must be arrested.
Time has come when they are brought back from the margins into the mainstream.
This is because even though the transgender community is having its own social
institutions, the stories we hear are horrendous. The parents must be
encouraged to feel that the birth of an intersex child is not a matter of
embarrassment or shame. It lies in the hands of the Government to launch a
sustained awareness campaign in this regard. Recent Tamil Films such as
“Peranbu” where Mamooty marries a transgender and “Super Delux” where Vijay
Sethupathi plays the role of a transgender and is also a parent to the child he
has fathered are encouraging trends.
22. It may not be out of place
to mention here that the State of Malta has enacted the Gender Identity, Gender
Expression and Sex Characteristics Act, 2015. In the said Statute the following
definitions can be seen :
"gender
expression" refers to each person’s manifestation of their gender
identity, and/or the one that is perceived by others;
"gender
identity" refers to each person’s internal and individual experience of
gender, which may or may not correspond with the sex assigned at birth,
including the personal sense of the body (which may involve, if freely chosen,
modification of bodily appearance and/ or functions by medical, surgical or
other means) and other expressions of gender, including name, dress, speech and
mannerisms;
"gender
marker" refers to the identifier which classifies persons within a
particular sex category;”
Section 3
(1) confers the right to gender identity and is as follows :
“3.(1) All
persons being citizens of Malta have the right to - (a) the recognition of
their gender identity; (b) the free development of their person according to
their gender identity; (c) be treated according to their gender identity and,
particularly, to be identified in that way in the documents providing their
identity therein; and (d) bodily integrity and physical autonomy.....
(3) The
gender identity of the individual shall be respected at all times.
(4) The
person shall not be required to provide proof of a surgical procedure for total
or partial genital reassignment, hormonal therapies or any other psychiatric,
psychological or medical treatment to make use of the right to gender
identity.”
23. There is yet another aspect
of the matter. Arunkumar, the first petitioner is a Hindu Kuravan. It is a
notified scheduled caste community. The second petitioner belongs to Saiva
Vellalar community. The Government of India has introduced a scheme known as
Dr.Ambedkar Scheme for Social Integration through Inter- Caste Marriages to
encourage intercaste marriages. As observed by Dr.B.R.Ambedkar in his speech in
the Constituent Assembly delivered on 25th November, 1949 castes are antinational. Intercaste marriages alone
will ultimately lead to social integration and fulfill the preambular promise of
fraternity. The petitioners are clearly entitled to get financial incentive as
set out in the said scheme. The petitioners are permitted to submit an
application to the fifth respondent who shall on being satisfied about the
eligibility of the petitioners disburse the incentive amount to them.
24. The second petitioner
appears to have been an intersex person at birth. In the affidavit filed in
support of this writ petition, it has been mentioned that she was assigned as a
female at birth. But, in the school records, the second petitioner has been
described as a male by name Manthiramoorthy. In the Aadhar Card, her gender has
been mentioned as “T” (Third Gender). A person who is in the Third Category is
entitled to remain beyond the duality of male/female or opt to identify oneself
as male or female. It is entirely the choice of the individual concerned.
25. Since this Court has held
that the fundamental rights of the second petitioner guaranteed under Articles
14, 19(1)(a), 21 and 25 of the Constitution of India have been infringed, the
orders impugned in this writ petition stand quashed and the third respondent is
directed to register the marriage solemnized between the petitioners on
31.10.2018 at Arulmighu Sankara Rameswara Temple, Tuticorin. The fourth
respondent is directed to issue a G.O prohibiting the performance of sex
reassignment surgery on intersex infants and children.
26. This writ petition stands
allowed. No costs. Consequently, connected miscellaneous petition is closed.