20 October 2020 Headquarters Rashtriya Sainik Sanstha, 133 B Modal Town East, Ghaziabad – Initiating a webinar on the above topic, Colonel Tejendra Pal Tyagi, the National President of the Rashtriya Sainik Sanstha, who received the Vir Chakra, told that the Uniform Civil Code in Article 44 of the Constitution. said to be implemented. Not only this, the Supreme Court has also advised the government many times to make serious efforts to implement it.
Colonel Santpal Raghav from Gurgaon said that in Islamic countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Turkey, Indonesia, Sudan and Egypt, and in Goa, India, when Uniform Civil Court is in force, then why not in the whole of India?
Major Sushil Goyal from Delhi told that the Uniform Civil Code mainly includes marriage, divorce, adoption and right to property. But due to vote bank politics, the government could not bring a uniform civil code on all these, due to which the country is suffering, the time that the courts had to resolve the disputes of the common man, that time was caught in the customs of different religions. Being wasted in matters.
Brigadier Mastender Singh from Ludhiana said that in 1976, when Indira Gandhi's five-year term was over and when all the opposition leaders were imprisoned due to emergency, the word "secular" was added by the 42nd amendment to the Constitution. | Now the situation is that despite being secular, communal riots are taking place. Today's politics is more harmful than Dr. Macaulay's education policy.
Air Commodore Surendra Singh Tyagi from Jamnagar told that Hindu Code Bill was passed soon after independence even after tremendous opposition, then Uniform Civil Code Bill should have been passed in its place. It's late Now it should be passed immediately. So that there can be peace and chain in the country. This topic will be taken up by the Rashtriya Sainik Sanstha with the government.
On this occasion, Gaurav Senani VR Jadhav, Captain Shashi Kant Mishra (Indian Navy) from Mumbai, Mrs Kanchan Veer, Mr Ashok Jain from Calcutta, Dr Manish Agarwal from Hyderabad also strongly supported the Uniform Civil Code and called it Panacea.