Friday, August 22, 2025
spot_img

No place for gay sex, adultery in Army: Gen. Rawat

Date:

Share post:

spot_imgspot_img

NEW DELHI: Army Chief Gen. Bipin Rawat on Thursday said gay sex and adultery will not be allowed in the Indian Army, months after the Supreme Court decriminalised homosexuality and struck down a colonial-era adultery law.
“In the Army, it is not acceptable,” he told a press conference while replying to a question on impact of the Supreme Court’s two historic verdicts. The Army Chief said though his force is not above the law, it will not be possible to allow gay sex and adultery in the Army.
“The Army is conservative. The Army is a family. We cannot allow this to perpetrate into the Army,” he said on adultery, adding soldiers and officers deployed along the borders cannot be allowed to be worried about their family. The conduct of the Army personnel is governed by the Army Act.
“In the Army we never thought this can happen. Anything that was thought of was put in the Army Act. It was something which was unheard of when the Army Act was made. We never thought this is going to happen. We never allow it. Therefore it was not put in the Army Act,” he said.
He further said, “I think anything what is being said or talked about will not be allowed to happen in the Indian Army.” At the same time Gen. Rawat said the Army is not above the law and that the Supreme Court is the highest judicial body of the country. The Army has been grappling with cases of adultery and the accused often face general court-martial.
In Army parlance, adultery is defined as “stealing the affection of a brother officer’s wife”. “We are not above the country’s law, but when you join the Indian Army, some of the rights and privileges you enjoy are not what we have. Some things are different,” the Army Chief said, addressing the press conference ahead of the Army Day on January 15.
In what was hailed as a historic move, a five-judge constitution bench of the Supreme Court last September unanimously decriminalised part of the 158-year-old colonial law under Section 377 of the IPC which criminalises consensual unnatural sex, saying it violated the rights to equality.
The apex court last year had also struck down a 158-year-old colonial-era law which it said treated women as “chattel of husbands”. The law provided for punishing a man for an affair but not the woman. (PTI)

spot_imgspot_img

Related articles

BTR elections: UPPL announces first list of 18 candidates

Guwahati, Aug. 22: The Pramod Boro-led United People’s Party Liberal (UPPL) has announced the party’s first list of...

Amit Shah accuses INDIA bloc’s VP nominee of supporting ‘Maoism’

Kochi, Aug 22: Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Friday accused retired Supreme Court Judge B Sudershan Reddy,...

Bihar: PM Modi inaugurates Asia’s widest six-lane bridge in Begusarai

Patna, Aug 22: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday inaugurated the much-awaited six-lane road bridge over the Ganga...

Sudheendra Kulkarni welcomes Beijing stand on US tariffs, says India-China together can change world order

New Delhi, Aug 22: Foreign Affairs expert and ex-PMO official, Sudheendra Kulkarni, has welcomed China’s criticism of US...