The Bombay High Court has ruled that the act of domestic violence committed in the United States (US) can be tried by a court in India.
Justice S S Shinde passed the judgement on a petition filed by a US-based IT professional, Mohammad Zuber Farooqi, who challenged the order of Mumbai's Mulund Metropolitan court and session court, which had directed him to pay interim maintenance to his wife.
The couple got married and shifted to the United States in 2008. But two years later the petitioner divorced his wife, who filed a domestic violence complaint against Mr Farooqi in India.
Following this, the Mulund court asked him to pay Rs 30,000 and Rs 15,000 per month to his wife and child.
Mr Farooqi then challenged the decision in a sessions court, which upheld it. He then moved the Bombay High Court to challenge the two orders but got no relief.
The High Court has now granted Mr Farooqi four weeks' time to comply with the order and pay the compensation. In the matter, the court observed that a delay of two years in filing a domestic violence complaint is no ground to not hear the complaint.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
US Woman Died After Abortion Ban Delayed Her Medical Care: Report Suspected Donald Trump Gunman Fired No Shots: US Secret Service What We Know About US Vice President Kamala Harris' Gun "Biggest Breach": Thousands Of Pagers Explode In Lebanon, Target Hezbollah Video: Leopard Spotted Crossing Road In Bengaluru's Electronic City AAP Asks Its Rajya Sabha MP Swati Maliwal To Quit Over Atishi Remarks 3 Children Crushed Under Tractor Carrying Ganesh Idol In Maharashtra: Cops "No U-Turns By Modi Government, Only Responsiveness": Piyush Goyal Exclusive How PM's Birthplace Vadnagar Shaped His Early Days, Documentary Reveals Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.