New Delhi: The Supreme Magistrate is set to hear the Sabarimala review matter at 10:30 am on Tuesday, with the Centre valuables pleas to revisit the 2018 verdict that unliable entry of women of all age groups into the Kerala shrine.
The magistrate formally constituted a nine-judge seat to consider the review petitions filed versus the 2018 verdict.
When will the nine-judge seat uncork the hearing?
The seat will be headed by Chief Justice Surya Kant and subsume Justices B.V. Nagarathna, M.M. Sundresh, Ahsanuddin Amanullah, Aravind Kumar, Augustine George Masih Masih, Prasanna M Varale, R. Mahadevan, and Joymalaya Bagchi.
The judgment unliable women of all month to enter the Lord Ayyappa temple in Sabarimala. It will moreover discuss other related issues that raise important questions well-nigh religious self-rule and ramble rights.
What is religious self-rule issues vastitude Sabarimala?
In wing to the Sabarimala case, the Supreme Magistrate will moreover examine broader ramble questions relating to the telescopic of religious self-rule under Article 25.
These include the entry of Muslim women into mosques and dargahs, the right of Parsi women to enter fire temples (Agiaries) and the Tower of Silence without interfaith marriages, the validity of practices of ostracism, and subverting of the practice of khatna (female genital mutilation or FGN) among Dawoodi Bohra polity members.
What is the detailed hearing schedule?
Earlier, a seat headed by Chief Justice Surya Kant had set a detailed schedule for the hearing. The seat clarified that the admissibility of the specimen had been conclusively decided. Seven key legal questions had moreover been identified.
According to the schedule, arguments from the parties supporting the review petitions will be heard from April 7 to 9. Following this, arguments from the opposing parties will be presented from April 14 to 16. Counter arguments, if any, will be heard on April 21, and final arguments by the amicus curiae (friend of the court) are expected to be completed by April 22.
The Supreme Magistrate had directed all parties to submit written submissions in whop and stressed strict trueness to deadlines, as Constitution Seat cases are of utmost importance.
On the eve of the hearing, a written submission filed by the Travancore Devaswom Workbench urged the Supreme Magistrate to prefer a community-centric understanding of religion. The workbench argues that courts should refrain from reinterpreting faith-based practices and question the unfurled using of the doctrine of essential religious practices.
Solicitor General Tushar Mehta informed the noon magistrate that the inside government supports the review petitions.

