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Will India ever be free of personal laws?
Updated On: 05 September, 2015 07:45 AM IST | | Kanchan Gupta
<p>Although it is not the best way to do so, let me begin by quoting from a PTI report, published in newspapers with a Lucknow dateline</p>

Although it is not the best way to do so, let me begin by quoting from a PTI report, published in newspapers with a Lucknow dateline. “The All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB) on Thursday said there was no scope of change in the ‘triple talaq’ system and rejected the suggestion by some community outfits for building a consensus on making a three-month period mandatory before finalisation of divorce.” The report was based on what AIMPLB spokesman Maulana Abdul Raheem Qureshi had to say about the All India Sunni Ulema Council’s letter that “if there was any scope in Islamic law then talaq said by a person thrice in one go should be considered as said only once.”

File picture of a girl standing with a poster denouncing talaq (divorce) on the occasion of the International Women’s Day. Pic/AFP
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