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Friday 18 January 2019

51 Women Below 50 Have Entered Sabarimala, Kerala Tells Supreme Court

51 Women Below 50 Have Entered Sabarimala, Kerala Tells Supreme Court



Kanaka Durga and Bindu Ammini have been facing threats since entering the Sabarimala temple on January 2.

NEW DELHI: 

HIGHLIGHTS

  1. Kerala government's counsel submitted a list of 51 women in court
  2. It was replying to petition filed by Kanaka Durga and Bindu Ammini
  3. Supreme Court directed Kerala to provide round-the-clock security
Over 50 women of menstruating age have entered the Sabarimala temple, the Kerala government told the Supreme Court today. The top court was hearing the petitions of two women in their 40s who had entered the celibate god's shrine earlier this month.
Senior advocate Vijay Hansaria, appearing for the state government, said 51 women devotees under the age of 50 have entered the temple since the top court's September order allowing girls/women between the ages of 10 and 50 into Lord Ayyappa's shrine.
Over 7,500 women in the age group of 10 to 50 years had registered online to enter Sabarimala using their Aadhaar details. Of them, over 50 women have already entered the temple without any issues, he added.
A list of these 51 women was submitted in the court in reply to petitions filed by Kanaka Durga, 42, and 44-year-old Bindu Ammini, who had entered the Sabarimala shrine on January 2.
The women had walked into the shrine before dawn. In a video accessed by NDTV, the women could be seen hurrying into the shrine, dressed in all-black and escorted by the police.
Their entry, however, led to the closing of the temple for an hour and a half for "cleansing". The purification ceremony was followed by threats to the women, and protests across Kerala by right-wing groups as well as some members of the BJP and the Congress.
Kanaka Durga was also attacked allegedly by her mother-in-law on Tuesday, prompting the two women to approach the Supreme Court seeking protection.
The court today directed the Kerala Police to provide round-the-clock security to these two women.
When the court was informed that the government was already providing adequate security to these women and others who have entered the Sabarimala temple, the three judge bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi said there was no harm if the government continued to do so even after the court's order.
Senior advocate Indira Jaising, appearing for the women petitioners, sought directions to authorities not to shut the temple for cleansing after the entry of any woman of reproductive age.
Ms Jaising also requested the court to allow clubbing of all the petitions on the Sabarimala temple issue. The bench, however, rejected her plea. There are around 48 petitions seeking a review of the judgment.
Since the top court ended the ban on women's entry into the Sabarimala temple on September 28, upholding the constitutional right of every individual to practice their faith, protesters tried every trick to stop them.

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