Shielding ‘choice’ from ‘honour’


Shielding 'Choice' from 'Honour': Karnataka's Anti-Honour Killing Law

1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Full name of Act Karnataka Freedom of Choice in Marriage and Prevention and Prohibition of Crimes in the Name of Honour and Tradition (Eva Nammava, Eva Nammava) Bill, 2026
Passed by Karnataka Legislative Assembly, March 24, 2026
Sponsoring Ministry / dept. Karnataka Home Department (Home Minister: G. Parameshwara)
Title phrase origin Vachana of Basavanna (12th-century Lingayat philosopher-reformer)
Phrase meaning "He is ours, he is ours" — inclusivity across caste
Key declaration in Bill "Consent of parents, family, caste or clan is not necessary once two adult individuals agree to marry"
Definition of 'honour crime' Covers: physical harm, killing, forced marriage/divorce, social boycott, performance of thithi (death rituals for living couples)
Penalty (non-fatal hurt) Imprisonment: not less than 2 years, up to 5 years + fine up to ₹1 lakh
Emergency protection deadline Local police/district administration must provide shelter/protection within 6 hours of intimation
District-level body Eva Nammava Vedike — retired judge, police officer, revenue officer, sub-registrar, others; facilitates marriages and provides counselling
Reported hate crimes (Karnataka) 15 cases over the past 5 years (per Home Minister's statement to the House)
Trigger case Killing of a pregnant 20-year-old in Inam Veerapur village, Hubballi taluk, December 2025
Relevant SC judgment Shakti Vahini v. Union of India (2018) — Articles 19 & 21 protect marital choice
Constitutional Articles invoked Art. 19(1)(a), Art. 21 (life & liberty), Art. 14, Art. 15 (non-discrimination)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Social / Gender

Ethical / Governance

Historical

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Karnataka anti-honour-killing Bill (2026) is titled "Eva Nammava, Eva Nammava" — a phrase from a vachana of Basavanna, 12th-century philosopher-reformer. [S2]
  2. The Bill was passed during Karnataka's Budget Session of the Legislature in March 2026. [S1]
  3. Penalty for non-fatal honour crimes under the Bill: imprisonment 2–5 years and fine up to ₹1 lakh. [S1]
  4. Protection (shelter, security) must be arranged by police/administration within 6 hours of a couple's intimation under the Bill. [S1]
  5. The Bill explicitly states that parental or family or caste consent is NOT required for marriage between two consenting adults. [S2]
  6. A district-level body called Eva Nammava Vedike — including a retired judge, police officer, revenue officer, and sub-registrar — will facilitate marriage solemnisation and counselling. [S1]
  7. Karnataka Home Minister G. Parameshwara stated that Karnataka recorded 15 hate crimes against couples in the past 5 years. [S2]
  8. The trigger case was the December 2025 killing of a pregnant 20-year-old in Inam Veerapur village, Hubballi taluk, by her father for marrying a Dalit man. [S2]
  9. The Bill criminalises "thithi" (death rituals for living couples) and social boycott as forms of honour crime — not just physical violence. [S1]
  10. Shakti Vahini v. Union of India (2018): Supreme Court held the right to choose one's partner is a fundamental right under Articles 19 and 21. [S3]
  11. Despite SC's 2018 direction, no central legislation against honour killings exists in India as of 2026. [S3]
  12. The Law Commission of India addressed honour killings in Report No. 242 (2012). [S3]
  13. Marriage law falls under Entry 5 of List III (Concurrent List) of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution, allowing state legislation on the subject. [S1]
  14. Gujarat's contrasting 2026 proposal requires couples to submit parents' identity documents and declare parents have been "kept informed" before registering a marriage. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Specific Syllabus Heading
GS-I Indian Society — Role of women, social empowerment; Salient features of Indian society; social reformation movements
GS-II Fundamental Rights; welfare schemes; mechanisms, laws, institutions for vulnerable sections; federalism (state vs. central legislation)
GS-IV Ethics — social norms vs. constitutional morality; role of family, society, and educational institutions in ethical development

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "The right to choose a life partner is inviolable under the Constitution, yet the State has failed to translate this into effective legal protection. Critically examine with reference to recent developments." (GS-II)
  2. "Honour-based crimes represent a collision between constitutional morality and community morality. Analyse the adequacy of India's legal framework to resolve this conflict." (GS-I / GS-IV)
  3. "Compare the Karnataka (2026) and Gujarat (2026) approaches to marriage registration and explain what they reveal about competing visions of individual autonomy in Indian federalism." (GS-II)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Khap Panchayats Extra-constitutional bodies most frequently issuing honour-crime orders; directly addressed in Shakti Vahini judgment
Special Marriage Act, 1954 Provides a religion-neutral marriage framework — often the route targeted couples use, and a flashpoint for parental opposition
Scheduled Castes & Atrocities Act (PoA Act), 1989 Overlapping protection for Dalit victims of caste-based violence in inter-caste marriage cases
Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 Parallel legislative protection mechanism; limitations in honour-crime contexts
Uniform Civil Code (UCC) Ongoing debate about centralising personal/marriage law; directly relevant to honour-crime's roots in community-specific norms
Constitutional Morality vs. Social Morality Core conceptual tension underlying honour crimes; Navtej Singh Johar and Indian Young Lawyers Association judgments are touchstones
Basavanna and Bhakti/Veerashaiva Reform Movement Historical/cultural context of the Bill's title; GS-I art and culture angle
State Women's Commissions & NCW Institutional actors mandated to address gender-based violence — role in triggering Shakti Vahini litigation

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. "Honour killing" is not a separate IPC/BNS offence. It is charged under murder (IPC Sec. 302 / BNS) and allied provisions — Karnataka's 2026 law is the first dedicated state statute; aspirants must not assume a central law exists.
  2. Eva Nammava Vedike ≠ a court. It is a district-level facilitation-and-counselling committee, not a judicial forum — do not conflate with designated fast-track courts directed in Shakti Vahini.
  3. Basavanna's phrase: The Bill uses "Eva Nammava" (Kannada: "He is ours"), not "Eva Namma" — a subtle distinction that could appear in a language/culture question; the vachana is from the 12th century, not earlier Vedic tradition.
  4. Gujarat vs. Karnataka conflation: Both are 2026 news events but represent opposite policy positions — Gujarat proposes parental notification (restrictive); Karnataka explicitly excludes parental consent (autonomy-affirming). Mixing them up in a Mains answer is a critical error.
  5. Marriage is a Concurrent List subject (List III, Entry 5): Aspirants sometimes incorrectly place it on the State List (List II) — the Concurrent placement means both Parliament and state legislatures can legislate, but central law prevails in case of conflict (Art. 254).

11. Sources