Sponsor

Compelling dead marriage to go on perpetuates mental agony: Supreme Court

The Supreme Court of India has ruled that courts can grant divorce when a marriage is irretrievably broken, ending a 16-year matrimonial dispute. Justices Nath and Mehta invoked Article 142, emphasizing that forcing couples to stay in 'dead marriages' causes mental agony.
Zoeken
Categorieën
Read More
12 month ban, Rs 8.20 lakh fine! Ex-England star penalised for drink-driving
Former England captain Paul Ince has been handed a ban for being caught driving over the legal...
By BharatUpdates 0 1
Govt spends Rs 1,523 billion, earns Rs 1,219 billion in FY 2024/25
KATHMANDU: Both revenue collection and budget expenditure fell short of annual targets in the...
By HamroGlobal 0 1
House committee tells govt to speed-up construction of Kalanki–Maharajgunj road
KATHMANDU: The Infrastructure Development Committee under the House of Representatives has...
By HamroGlobal 0 3
5,600 startups and counting: UAE leads GCC’s startup revolution
The Gulf Cooperation Council nations are becoming tech hubs. The UAE leads with many startups and...
By BharatUpdates 0 5
Gulf’s next big crisis: As economies diversify, water shortages loom
The GCC countries are experiencing a significant economic shift, with non-oil sectors like...
By BharatUpdates 0 5