The petition signed by around 150 women's groups referred to a recent apex court directive on the "misuse" of Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code.
Under this Section, if a woman's husband or any relative is found guilty of cruelty towards her, they can be fined and jailed for up to three years.
The groups demanded that a study be conducted on the Section to "substantiate women's experiences and bust the myth of misuse".
"The NCW is founded upon the recognition that in a patriarchal society, women face a far greater degree of vulnerability and, hence, any effort to reform any law cannot go against this well evidenced fact and reality and now argue that men are equally if not more vulnerable than women," All India Progressive Women's Association secretary Kavita Krishnan -- one of the signatories -- said in a statement.
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NCW Chairperson Lalitha Kumaramangalam said in response to the petition that it was necessary to "delink the emotional issues being raised" on the misuse of Section 498A and "argue for its effective use on purely legal logic and rationale".
The groups, among them the Peoples' Union for Civil Liberty, Jaipur, Saheli Women's Resource Centre, New Delhi, and Association For Advocacy and Legal Initiatives, Lucknow, said the top court's verdict on July 27 gave "credence" to the unsubstantiated allegations that "a large number of women are misusing the laws, and filing false complaints against men".
It added that "judicial decisions regarding the right of women to a violence-free and dignified life" in their matrimonial homes could not be based on "hearsay and anecdotes".
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