Here is your 10-point cheatsheet to the story:
The dean of Salem's Sivaraj Homeopathy Medical College, G Kannan, said, "Hadiya talked to Jahan for a while from my mobile phone, after I, as the local guardian, asked her whether she was interested in talking or meeting anybody". Mr Kannan said she appeared "relieved from depression" after the chat, and said assured that there was "no restriction" on her talking or meeting with anyone.
"I need the freedom to meet the person I love. I wanted to meet my husband... Till now I did not get freedom," Hadiya had told NDTV, adding, "I am asking for my fundamental rights."
Hadiya will be provided security at the college. The police said a sub-inspector and four constables -- two women and two men -- have been put on her security detail.
On Tuesday, Hadiya was flown from Delhi to Tamil Nadu and re-admitted to the college in Salem, where she was studying before she married Shafin Jahan. The two met through a matrimonial website affiliated to an organization, which the National Investigation Agency, believes is linked to terror.
The college admitted her as Akhila Asokan, her name before she converted. The college said she was admitted under her old name as she has not given an application requesting a change.
There is also some confusion about where and with whom she would spend her college holidays. The management, the Dean said, would approach the apex court in this regard.
Hadiya told NDTV that she has no phone and hadn't contacted anyone. "For six months I was put up with people I hate. They only tried to convert me. My own parents said I'm mentally unstable," she alleged.
Hadiya's parents refused to accept her marriage to Shafin Jahan, who returned from Oman recently, and they allege that she was being indoctrinated and will be taken to Syria. In May, on the family's petition, the Kerala High Court annulled Hadiya's marriage and ordered her to go back to her parents. Shafin Jahan had challenged the order in the Supreme Court, arguing that as an adult, she has the right to decide.
The Supreme Court judges heard Hadiya for the first time on Monday. Wearing a red scarf or hijab, she said she had been illegally confined at her parents' home for 11 months and she wanted to study. She also asked that her husband be made her guardian, to which the judges said, "No one can be treated as anyone's property."
The Supreme Court said she can complete her studies in Tamil Nadu, but left the question of her marriage to the next hearing in January.
"We Feel We Have Got Freedom": Hadiya After Court Upholds Her Marriage Hadiya's Marriage Restored By Supreme Court, High Court Decision Scrapped 'Muslim By Choice, Want To Live With Husband': Hadiya Tells Top Court Under-Fire Trainee IAS Officer Accuses Pune Collector Of Harassment Trainee IAS Officer Puja Khedkar Recalled To Academy, Training Put On Hold "No Defamatory Remarks Against Governor": High Court To Mamata Banerjee Royal Enfield Guerrilla 450 Launched In India; Prices Start At Rs. 2.39 Lakh Admission Deadline Extended For EWS And Special Needs Children UGC Launches Project To Develop 22,000 Books In Indian Languages Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.