How will the leave encourage more women to be part of the workforce, the court asked the petitioner and said mandating such leave will lead to women "being shunned from the workforce". "...we do not want that," the bench said
"This is actually a government policy aspect and not for the courts to look into, " it said.
"Petitioner says that a representation was submitted to the Centre in May 2023. Since the issues raise multifarious objectives of state policy, there is no reason for this court to intervene in light of our previous order," it said.
The bench, however, permitted lawyer Rakesh Khanna, appearing for petitioner and lawyer Shailendra Tripathi, to move the secretary of the Ministry of Women and Child Development and Additional Solicitor General Aishwarya Bhati.
"We request the secretary to look into the matter at the policy level and take a decision after consulting all stakeholders and see if a model policy can be framed," it ordered.
The court made it clear that that the consultation process of the Centre will not come in the way of states if they take any steps in this regard.
The top court had earlier disposed of a plea seeking menstrual pain leave for women students and working women across the country.
It had then said that since the issue falls under the policy domain, a representation can be made to the Centre. The senior lawyer said that till date no decision has been taken by the Centre.
SEE ALSO:
Bansal Wire IPO allotment – How to check allotment, IPO GMP, listing date and more
Reliance Jio IPO – Mukesh Ambani-led telco might be gearing up for India’s biggest IPO
Jio vs Airtel vs Vi recharge plans comparison – plan benefits and price comparison after tariff hike