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Supreme Court serves notice to Kerala Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church for mandatory forced confessions

The Supreme Court on Monday issued a notice in response to a plea filed against the unconstitutional practice of mandatory and forced confessions in the Kerala Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church involving exploitation of both men and women.

The three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice of India Justice S.A. Bobde, Justices A.S. Bopanna and V. Ramasubramanian heard the plea,  relying on several newspaper reports wherein priests have sexually exploited women parishioners after forcing them to confess and have also used their confessions to blackmail their spouses/parents.

The petitioners submitted that the Church is forcing the members to mandatorily confess and make payment of dues. Such practices done in church, are of public nature, affecting human dignity and liberty of thought. The petitioner said the believers have been forced to remain meek and quiet out of fear of removal from parish membership, ostracization etc.

According to the petitioners, women are being sexually exploited and blackmailed, and people are being forced to confess, with the threat that if they don’t, their name will be struck off from the parish register and they will be barred from all church activities. The Church is also forcing the people to confess before permitting them to marry.

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The petition sought directions that men and women should not be compelled to make mandatory confession or payment of monies, parishioners be restrained, and mandatory confession be declared as the violative of the right of privacy guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution.

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