In India, for every divorced Muslim man, there are four divorced Muslim women, an analysis of Census 2011 data has shown, writes Alison Saldanha

Across religious communities, except Sikhs, there are more divorced women than men. But the gender skew is particularly sharp among Muslims (79:21), followed by “other religions” (72:28), and Buddhists (70:30).

Among divorced Indian women, 68 per cent are Hindus and 23.3 per cent are Muslims, according to Census 2011 data on the marital status of Indians.

The data were recently cited by Muslim groups protesting the Law Commission’s formulation of a Uniform Civil Code, especially a ban on triple talaq.

Among divorced men, Hindus account for 76 per cent, and Muslims, 12.7 per cent. Both Christian women and men cover 4.1 per cent of their gender-respective divorced groups.

Women’s rights activists believe that the gender imbalance in the numbers implies that more men than women are remarrying.

“If there are 100 divorced couples, it should show a 50:50 sex-ratio.

“The skewed ratio plainly shows that after divorce, not only is it easier for men to remarry but also that they show a greater need or want to remarry,” Flavia Agnes, legal scholar and women’s rights activist, told IndiaSpend in a telephone interview.

The skewed ratio among Muslims could be attributed to two problems, according to Hasina Khan, founder of the Bebaak Collective, a Muslim women’s organisation based in Mumbai.

“The first is the absolute powers given to men under the Muslim personal laws by allowing triple talaq and so on. For women, getting married provides security of shelter and food with few rights for negotiation,” she said.

The other reason is the state’s failure to empower Muslim women, she added.

“There is little political will to address the needs of this sub-group. The socio-economic condition of Muslim women in India continues to deteriorate with inadequate access to good education, job opportunities and so on,” Khan said.

With a total population of 8.5 lakh divorced persons, the Census recorded a more shocking feature of the so-called ‘traditional and rural India;’ where failed marriages register a higher proportion compared to urban India.

However, noteworthy, is that a larger chuck of the nation’s population still reside in rural India.

In urban India, there were 5.03 lakh divorced persons.

Maharashtra, with 2.09 lakh persons, recorded the highest number of divorced citizens. The second-most populous state also holds the largest disproportion of men-to-women divorcees with almost 73.5 per cent or 150,000 divorced persons in the state being women. The highest population of divorced men in the country – 100,000 reside in Gujarat, accounting for 54 per cent of the state’s divorced population.

Goa, with 1,330 divorcees, holds the lowest record of failed marriages.

More women than men in India are separated – out of a marriage without a formal divorce, the Census data showed. Activists believe that this indicates widespread practice of polygamy across India.

“Men often desert their wives in a separation, withholding from them the freedom to remarry. The data incongruence clearly shows that more men are into polygamy, obtaining second and third wives, while society gives no rights for women,” Agnes said.

Within religious communities, the highest imbalance of separated women-to-men ratio has been recorded

  • among Muslims, with women accounting for 75 per cent of the separated population.
  • Christian women, who comprised 69 per cent of the separated population within their community, follow.
  • Another significant disparity has been recorded among Buddhists, where separated women comprised 68 per cent of the demographic group within their community.

Over the decade ending 2011, there was a 39 per cent rise in the number of single Indian women — including widows, divorcees and unmarried women, and those deserted by husbands — IndiaSpend reported in November 2015.

However, the number of bachelors (58 per cent) still exceeds unmarried women, according to the Census data, indicating higher pressure on women to get married.

On October 7, the Law Commission published a list of 16 questions seeking public opinion on the need for a Uniform Civil Code for India. Apart from probing citizens’ perception of gender equality in prevalent personal laws across religions, a question asked if the practice of triple talaq should be abolished, continued or amended.

Another question sought views on strengthening Hindu women’s rights to inherit property.

The Muslim Personal Law Board has criticised the legal panel’s exercise, claiming the Law Commission is not acting independent of the central government that opposed the triple talaq law in Supreme Court the same day.

Responding to a batch of public interest litigations filed by NGOs and women’s rights groups on the issue, the Centre said the practice cannot be regarded as an essential part of religion.

“There are gender discriminatory personal laws across India’s religious communities – not merely among Muslims.

“Though it claims to aid vulnerable sections, the Law Commission’s plans for the Uniform Civil Code do not deal with these in the right spirit. The uniformity it speaks of would only dilute India’s plural cultures while bringing in the same patriarchal bias,” Khan said.

Hindus comprise about 80 per cent of India’s population, while Muslims account for 14.23 per cent. Christians are 2.3 per cent followed by Sikhs with 1.72 per cent of the population.

Buddhists and Jains comprise 0.7 per cent and 0.37 per cent, respectively, of the population.

(Alison Saldanha is an assistant editor with IndiaSpend.org, a public interest journalism platform.)

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