[<<“We are inclined to modify the order dated 16th August and is directing
the presence of the daughter of the 1st respondent at 3PM on 27th November.
We may further add that this court shall speak to her not in-camera but in
open court”>>

(Source: <
http://www.livelaw.in/breaking-sc-orders-hadiyas-production-know-mind-stiff-objection-nia-father-brushed-aside/#.WfbbpU3BAhQ.facebook
>.)

That's undoubtedly a very remarkable and welcome departure from the stand
taken by the earlier Supreme Court bench, not to speak of the Kerala High
Court, on this case.

What, however, one finds utterly puzzling is why the Court, on Monday, has
given one month's time to produce Hadiya, currently under her parents'
"custody" in Kerala.
In fact, she could have had very well been produced Wednesday, even if not
today, Tuesday, had the Court so directed.

This one (full) month, one can very well imagine, ther (custodian) family
will put to rather good use.
She may be subjected to a range of treatments, stretching from brutal
physical torture (beating, denial of food and use of toilet etc.) to
emotional blackmail (mother'd commit suicide and such) likes.
Maybe all at the same time, by different palyers playing different roles.
Even drugging and subjecting to hypnotic suggestions cannot be ruled out.
And, in this ("righteous") venture, the "family" would be duly mentored and
backed up by the Hindutva Brigade.
Maybe even the NIA.

Of particular relevance: <<"It is a well-oiled machinery. Consent is
manipulated by indoctrination, radicalisation. In fact, people with
Hypnotic expertise have been employed to manipulate young women," says NIA
to the Supreme Court (on Monday).>>
(Source: <
http://www.news18.com/news/india/supreme-court-live-constitution-bench-to-hear-pleas-against-aadhaar-linking-govt-wont-extend-deadline-1560875.html
>.)
Also of relevance: <<Earlier, in a video released in August, Hadiya was
heard pleading with activist Rahul Eashwar to help end her confinement.
"Get me out of here. Today or tomorrow, I am going to die. I am sure about
this. My father is getting angry, I can make out. He pushes me, stamps at
me," says the 24-year-old. Hadiya has been living with her father after the
Kerala High Court annulled her marriage to Shafin Jahan in May this year
and ordered her to return to live with her parents in Kottayam.>>
(Source; ibid.)

Maybe, for a clue we're to look here: <<“We will be failing in our duty if
we do not take on record the submission of ASG Maninder Singh and Senior
Advocate Shyam Divan that in a case of present nature when there is
sufficient material on record and a pattern of indoctrination the choice of
the (adult) person may not be treated as absolute”>>
(Source: <
http://www.livelaw.in/breaking-sc-orders-hadiyas-production-know-mind-stiff-objection-nia-father-brushed-aside/#.WfbbpU3BAhQ.facebook
>.)

So, the window of one month allows a good opportunity for
counter-indoctrination, by whatever means.]

https://scroll.in/article/856014/though-supreme-court-wants-to-hear-hadiya-it-has-allowed-her-forcible-confinement-to-be-prolonged

LOVE JIHAD

Supreme Court wants to hear Hadiya but allows her forcible confinement to
be prolonged
The case has attracted widespread attention because Hindutva supporters
claim that the Kerala woman is a victim of so-called love jihad.

by  Sruthisagar Yamunan

Published Yesterday · 08:46 pm

The Supreme Court on Monday said on Monday that it would question Kerala
woman Hadiya in the open court on November 27 about whether her marriage to
a Muslim man occured with her consent. In May, the Kerala High Court had
annulled the marriage.

Hadiya’s case has attracted nationwide attention because Hindutva activists
have claimed that it is a case of so-called love jihad – a campaign waged
by Muslim men to woo Hindu women in order to convert them to Islam. Hadiya,
who was born Hindu, said she converted to Islam willingly before her
marriage. But her father, Ashokan, alleged that her former husband Shafin
Jahan was conspiring to take his daughter to Syria to fight for the Islamic
State group.

He filed a habeas corpus petition in the Kerala Court. The court eventually
annulled Hadiya’s marriage and ordered her to return to her parents’s home
under police guard.

But on October 3, the Supreme Court wondered how a High Court could annul a
marriage using its special powers under Article 226 of the Constitution,
which was framed to help the court protect fundamental rights. The
annulment of a marriage requires a civil trial.

On Monday, Chief Justice of India Deepak Misra made it clear that the court
would decide on the matter only after hearing Hadiya in person. The bench
dismissed her father’s plea to conduct the proceedings in camera and
ordered him to produce his daughter at 3 pm on November 27.

‘Pattern of indoctrination’
In the course of Monday’s proceedings, Misra asked the lawyers appearing
for Ashokan and the National Investigation Agency if there was any legal
bar to an adult woman in falling in love with a criminal. The NIA had been
brought into the picture by a bench headed by former Chief Justice JS
Khehar on August 24, when it asked the agency to investigate whether there
was a larger trend of religious indoctrination in Kerala. After Misra as
chief justice took over, the court’s position changed. The new chief
justice even asked if there was any scope in law for the Supreme Court to
move beyond the proceedings in the High Court and order an NIA probe, which
was mentioned neither in the petition moved by Hadiya’s husband Jahan nor
in the High Court order.

On Monday, the lawyers for the NIA and Ashokan argued that there is
material relating “to a pattern of indoctrination” and that the choice of
the individual in question “should not be treated as absolute for guiding
the jurisdictional spectrum of habeas corpus”. The court refused to accept
this. It said it would hear Hadiya in person to determine her position. The
court had said on October 9 that consent was the most important determinate
factor in the case.

Despite the positive signals in Monday’s proceedings, the fact remains that
Hadiya will continue to be under forcible confinement at her father’s home.
The Supreme Court in its Monday order did not elaborate on why this should
continue and extended the police protection given to Hadiya and her family
till the next hearing.

Last week, Rahul Eswar, an activist in Kerala who met Hadiya at her
father’s home, released a video of the conversation he had with her. In the
edited video, Hadiya said her father was threatening her life. She claimed
he was physically assaulting them.

She said:

“You have to get me out. I am sure I will be killed tomorrow or the day
after. My father is getting angry, I know. When I walk, he is pushing me
and kicking me. If my head or any body part hits somewhere and I die….”

Eswar said he had not released the entire video because it could cause
communal tensions. But whatever was released made one this crystal clear:
Hadiya is not living in her father’s house voluntarily.

As a result, it is not clear why the Supreme Court has extended her stay in
Ashokan’s home in Kotayam until November 27. Essentially, the court has
allowed Hadiya’s liberty to be curtailed for another 28 days despite the
fear that she could be put under undue pressure to take her father’s side.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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