Osho wife
The man was ‘anguished’ by his wife’s decision not to wear Indian traditional clothes to work
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Last year a family court in Mumbai ruled in the husband’s favour and granted a divorce after his wife failed to appear before the court, with the husband’s evidence remaining unchallenged, the news report said. He said his wife’s “cruel behaviour” and her “adamant, aggressive, stubborn and autocratic” nature had made it difficult for him to live with her. He alleged that she would force him to have sex, even at times when he was sick, and threatened to sleep with other men when he refused. But last year, a man in Mumbai (formerly known as Bombay) wanted to divorce his wife because of too much sex. In his petition, the man described his wife as having an “excessive and insatiable appetite for sex” ever since their marriage in April 2012, according to a report by the Press Trust of India news agency. While overturning the lower court’s ruling, Bombay high court Justice ML Tahaliyani noted: “Socialising to some extent in the present society is permissible.”Īn ‘excessive and insatiable appetite for sex’ has also been cited as a cause for divorceĪ sexless marriage is a common trigger for divorce globally.
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The court observed that the 42-year-old man, who married his wife in 1999, was also in the “habit of enjoying parties,” and therefore could not conclude that the woman had subjected the man to cruelty, either physically or mentally. “He is not entitled for a decree of divorce on the ground of cruelty,” the court said. Last week, the Bombay high court overturned a family court ruling from 2011 that granted divorce to a sailor who claimed his wife’s regular partying, among other things, was a form of abuse. Is a woman partying really a form of abuse? Atish Patel shares a few of the more unlikely examples.
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The Supreme Court has said there cannot be any “strait-jacket formula or fixed parameters for determining mental cruelty in matrimonial matters.” Because of its wide legal definition, Indian courts have had to rule on a host of bizarre interpretations of what constitutes non-physical abuse. But what amounts to abuse has long been open to debate, especially when determining whether psychological trauma has been afflicted on a person during marriage. India still has one of the lowest divorce rates in the world, but marriage breakdowns are becoming more common. Experts say most cases of divorce in India are filed on the grounds of abuse, or what’s legally termed as “cruelty”. As reported by Atish Patel in BBC, Section India, on August 5, 2015.