Saturday, January 4, 2014

Maharashtra Legislative Assembly passed the much awaited Anti-Superstition Bill

MH

The Legislative Assembly of Maharashtra on 13 December 2013 passed the much-awaited Anti-Superstition Bill. The Bill seeks to curb black magic and other inhuman practices arising out of superstition.
It came after four months of the murder of the noted rationalist Dr. Narendra Dabholkar on 20 August 2013 in Pune, who fought for such a law for more than for one and a half decade. Earlier, the State Government of Maharashtra on 21 August 2013 adopted an Anti-Black Magic and Superstition Ordinance.
The Lower House adopted the Bill by a voice vote with certain amendments. The Bill was introduced in the Lower House on 10 December 2013 by the Social Justice Minister Shivajirao Moghe. Resentment and dismay was expressed by the opposition members, over the passage of the Bill in undue haste even after development of consensus on the Bill.
Now the Bill will be taken to the Legislative Council for consideration and passage, after which it will be enforced as a law. The state Government had promulgated an ordinance in this regard after the assassination of the Anti-Superstition campaigner Dr. Dabholkar and introduced the revised Bill to get it converted into the law.