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At least 67.2% of Muslim women support a common law for all Indians for personal matters such as marriage, divorce, adoption and inheritance, India’s biggest Uniform Civil Code (UCC) survey conducted exclusively by the News18 Network has found.
Without mentioning the UCC, 884 News18 reporters interviewed 8,035 Muslim women across 25 states and Union Territories in the country on themes the UCC is likely to cover. The survey participants were Muslim women in the 18-65+ category across regions, communities, educational and marital status, and across the educational spectrum, from the illiterate to the post-graduate.
The UCC, in effect, means one law which would be applicable to all religious communities in matters such as marriage, divorce, inheritance, adoption, maintenance, among others. Muslim organisations reacted strongly to the Centre’s recent announcement that the Law Commission would hold UCC consultations afresh, with the All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB) saying the “majoritarian morality” should not override religious freedom and rights of minority communities in the name of a code. News18 Network decided to check if its views are indeed shared by the wider community, especially women, who would be most affected if the status quo were to continue.
THE COMMON LAW QUESTION: MORE SUPPORT AMONG GRADUATES, 18-44 AGE GROUP
When asked if they would support a common law for all Indians for personal matters such as marriage, divorce, adoption and inheritance, 67.2% of women – 5,403 – said ‘yes’. While 2,039 (25.4%) said ‘no’, and 7.4% (593 respondents) said ‘don’t know or can’t say’.
Among those who had completed their graduation and above, 68.4% or 2,076 women were in support of a common law, 27% (820) said ‘no’, while 4.6% (137) said ‘don’t know or can’t say’.
News18's #MegaUCCPoll reveals, 67.2% of India's Muslim women said yes when asked if they support a common law for marriage, divorce, adoption and inheritance;"I'm not at all surprised by the results. You've (News18) given a voice to Indian Muslim women": Activist… pic.twitter.com/sNyKevFOta
— News18 (@CNNnews18) July 10, 2023
In case of age-wise responses, 4,366 (69.4%) of those in the 18-44 age group were in support of a common law, 24.2% (1,524) said ‘no’, while 6.4% or 405 said ‘don’t know or can’t say’. In case of those aged 44+, 59.6% or 1,037 said ‘yes’, 515 (29.6%) said ‘no’, and 10.8% (188) said ‘don’t know or can’t say’.
Of the surveyed women, 18.8% were in the 18-24 age group, 32.9% were aged 25-34, 26.6% were aged 35-44, 14.4% were aged 45-54, 5.4% were aged 55-64 and 1.9% were 65+. While 70.3% were married, 24.1% were unmarried, 2.9% were widowed and 2.9% divorced. A total of 73.1% of the respondents were Sunni, 13.3% Shia and 13.6% others.
Among the women surveyed, 10.8% were post-graduates, 27% graduates, 20.8% had studied up to Class 12+, 13.8% were Class 10+, 12.9% had studied till Class 5-10, 4.4% up to Class 5, 4.2% were illiterate and 4.2% had basic literacy, with 1.9% others.
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