Home News Does rape within marriage count? To India’s courts, no.

Does rape within marriage count? To India’s courts, no.

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In one of Mumbai’s sprawling informal settlements, Amina faced emotional, physical, and sexual abuse from her spouse for nearly 20 years. “I always felt like what was happening to me was wrong,” says Amina, whose name has been changed to protect her identity, “but then I’d think, he’s my husband.” 

Although Indian women are 17 times more likely to experience sexual violence from their own husband than anyone else, India remains one of the few democratic countries that doesn’t consider nonconsensual sex within marriage to be rape. 

Why We Wrote This

India is one of the few countries that does not recognize marital rape as a crime. Recent petitions to change that – and the backlash they’ve sparked – shine a light on how the Indian government and society continue to view women’s right to bodily autonomy.

A two-judge bench of the Delhi high court is currently mulling over petitions to strike down the marital rape exception. Judgment was reserved in late February, and a verdict could come any day. Many, including the government, have argued that expanding the definition of rape “may destabilize the institution of marriage.” It is this view, petitioners and experts say, that shrouds the issue in shame and keeps women from seeking support.

The country’s rape laws stem from “patriarchal thinking that once a woman is married, she has no agency,” says Mariam Dhawale, general secretary of All India Democratic Women’s Association, adding that closing the marital rape loophole “opens up a door for women to ask for justice.”

In Mumbai’s informal settlement of Dharavi, women know they can turn to Amina. As a volunteer with the Society for Nutrition, Education and Health Action (SNEHA), a nonprofit that works on issues of women’s health and safety, she’s always out and about, checking in with women in her neighborhood and supporting those facing violence at home. She urges them to call the police help line or visit the crisis center, but as a survivor herself, she understands why many don’t.

For almost 20 years, Amina – whose name has been changed to protect her identity – faced relentless abuse from her husband. He controlled her movements and finances. If she were even 10 minutes late dropping their children off at school, she was beaten and locked outside their home. Her neighbors knew about some of the abuse, but what they couldn’t know, she says, was that “he forced himself on” her as well. At the time, Amina didn’t even understand that this was rape. “I always felt like what was happening to me was wrong, but then I’d think, he’s my husband,” Amina says about the sexual violence. “Even today, things are the same way. Women can’t easily open up about it.”

One in 3 Indian women between the ages of 18 and 59 say they’ve experienced some form of spousal violence, according to government data, and further analysis shows Indian women are 17 times more likely to experience sexual violence from their own husband than anyone else. Yet India remains one of the few democratic countries that doesn’t consider nonconsensual sex within marriage to be rape. 

Why We Wrote This

India is one of the few countries that does not recognize marital rape as a crime. Recent petitions to change that – and the backlash they’ve sparked – shine a light on how the Indian government and society continue to view women’s right to bodily autonomy.

A two-judge bench of the Delhi high court is currently mulling over petitions to strike down the marital rape exception. But many, including government representatives, argue that expanding the definition of rape is antithetical to the institution of marriage in India. It is this view, petitioners and experts say, that shrouds the issue in shame and keeps women from seeking support. 

“We have seen that the husband uses sexual violence as a means to exert power over his wife,” says Mariam Dhawale, general secretary of All India Democratic Women’s Association, one of the petitioners. She attributes this behavior to a “patriarchal thinking that once a woman is married, she has no agency, she has no right to refuse her husband.”

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