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Kerala HC Refuses to Rule Grihalakshmi Breastfeeding Cover Obscene


Mangalore Today News Network

June 21, 2018: In a huge relief for the Malayalam magazine Grihalakshmi, the Kerala High Court recently refused to categorise a cover of the magazine showing a model breastfeeding a child as obscene, stating that shocking one’s morals” is an “elusive concept” and that “one man’s vulgarity is another man’s lyric”.

 

cover pic.jpg


According to legal affairs website Livelaw.in, the Bench comprising then Chief Justice Antony Dominic and Justice Dama Seshadri Naidu dismissed the petition, saying, “Going by the contemporary community standards and without troubling ourselves with patent offensiveness – we may observe that, given the picture’s particular posture and its background setting (mother feeding the baby), as depicted in the magazine, it is not prurient or obscene; nor even suggestive of it. We, therefore, dismiss the writ petition.”

The magazine’s March 2018 issue carried a photo of Dubai-based actor and model Gilu Joseph looking directly at the camera, with a baby at her breast. The text on the cover read: “Mothers tell Kerala: please stop staring, we need to breastfeed.” It immediately became the topic of hot debate on social media.

The image was part of a campaign called “Breastfeed Freely”, according to NDTV, which is attempting to stop shaming women breastfeeding in public. However, NDTV said that the decision to use a model who is not a mother herself became a point of contention among many netizens criticising the cover.

The outrage culminated in advocate Vinod Mathew filing a case at the Court of Judicial Magistrate in Kollam, Kerala, against the publishers and Joseph, The News Minute reported. Another advocate, Jiyas Jamal from Aluva, also lodged a complaint with the State Child Rights Commission against Joseph, the publishers of Grihalakshmi and the parents of the baby who was featured.

According to Livelaw.in, the Petitioner, Felix M A had said that the magazine cover violated provisions of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act and Rules, as well as Section 45 of the Juvenile Justice Act. He had also alleged violation of provisions of the Indecent Representation of Women (Prohibition) Act, 1986, and Article 39(e) and (f) of the Constitution of India.

However, the court did not agree with the allegations made by the petitioner. “Even the sections relied on by Felix fail to convince us that the respondent publishers have committed any offence, much less a cardinal one, affecting the Society’s moral fabric, and offending its sensibilities,” the bench said.


Courtesy: Yahoo.com


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