To justify the policy of not recruiting married women, the army said that both unmarried male and female candidates were prohibited from entering into a wedlock during the 10- month training period.
In its short reply, the Army said that married women "may seek maternity leave which will result in discontinuation of her training" at the Officers' Training Academy (OTA).
It also said that after the 10 months training period, "it is open to the female candidates to get married."
"Therefore, restriction on female candidates of marriage at the threshold stage is only to ensure that they are invariably in a physical condition which would enable them to participate in pre-commissioning training, and significantly this restriction applies to male candidates also in the sense that during pre-commissioning training they cannot get married if they were otherwise unmarried," it said.
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The Army said the rules were not to create discriminatory
regime vis-a-vis women but only to facilitate their seamless entry and absorption in the forces.
It said the rules apply equally to unmarried men and women, as they cannot marry during the time of training, and JAG was not the only department in which married female candidates are barred from applying.
The court had earlier sought the response of Ministry of Defence and the Army's Directorate General of Recruiting on the plea which has contended that "at present, JAG Department of Indian Army recruits males (married/unmarried) and females (only unmarried) for serving in the Indian Army."
The petitioner has also alleged that "this discrimination on grounds of gender is violative of the fundamental right of equality before law, right not to be discriminated on the ground of sex, equality of opportunity in matters of public employment, fundamental right to practice any profession and occupation and human rights of the women."
It has also sought that eligibility conditions prohibiting the entry of married female candidates in the JAG department be declared unconstitutional.