Wife watching porn not grounds for divorce, court rules
Asia
By
AFP
| Mar 20, 2025

An Indian court has ruled that wives watching pornography is not grounds for divorce, adding that women retain the right to masturbate and do not surrender their sexual autonomy once they marry.
Conversations around female sexuality are considered taboo in India, especially with married women who are expected to prioritise their husbands and children over themselves.
Wednesday's ruling in the southern state of Tamil Nadu came after a man appealed the decision of a lower court that refused to grant him a divorce.
His case rested on several acts of alleged cruelty by his spouse, including what he claimed was her addiction to masturbating while watching pornography.
In dismissing the appeal, the Madras High Court ruled that "self pleasure is not forbidden fruit".
READ MORE
Treasury to borrow more locally in a bid to tame rising loan costs
Mandatory soil test looms for developers before construction
Affordable housing, markets give a new lease of life to the countryside
Inflation top issue for local CEOs in 2025
Senators raise concern over public debt currently at Sh11 trillion
Travel industry players call for policies to strengthen payment systems
KDC partners with private firm to set up steam plant
Shareholders joy as more banks up dividends on surge in profits
Kenya's property sector eyes green housing amid cost, policy concerns
Rwanda to host Africa's first AI and demographic summit in April
"When masturbation among men is acknowledged to be universal, masturbation by women cannot be stigmatised," the court said in its ruling, a copy of which AFP has seen.
The court added that a woman "retains her individuality" even after getting married and that her "fundamental identity as an individual, as a woman, is not subsumed by her spousal status".
The court argued that addiction to pornography was "bad" and could not be "morally justified" but was not legal grounds for divorce.
Divorce remains taboo across much of India with only one in every 100 marriages ending in dissolution, often owing to family and social pressure to sustain unhappy marriages.
Chronic backlogs in India's criminal justice system mean some divorce petitions take years to reach a resolution.