New Delhi, Sep 17 - The government Thursday refrained from taking a view on the Delhi High Court's ruling decriminalising gay sex, and said it was for the Supreme Court to rule on the appropriateness of the verdict.
'The cabinet considered the report of the group of ministers and decided to ask the attorney general to assist the Supreme Court in every way desired in arriving at an opinion on the (Delhi) high court judgment,' Information and Broadcasting Minister Ambika Soni said.
She was briefing reporters after a cabinet meeting chaired by Prime Minister Manomohan Singh here Thursday.
On Aug 17, the Supreme Court had sought the central government's stand on decriminalising gay sex between consenting adults after lawsuits challenged the Delhi High Court's July 2 verdict.
In the historic ruling, the Delhi High Court had quoted Jawaharlal Nehru to emphasise that the constitution guaranteed equal rights to all citizens.
The Supreme Court had refused to suspend the high court verdict after Attorney General Goolam E. Vahanvati indicated the government's lack of keenness in seeking a stay on the ruling.
Soni fielded a barrage of questions on the divisive issue, including one on whether the government was taking the soft way out, saying: 'I don't think you can take that viewpoint.'
She also refused to answer a question on whether a cabinet note, drawn up on the basis of the group of ministers meeting that had stated there was no 'legal error' in the Delhi High Court verdict that also partly scrapped the penal provisions against homosexuality framed during the British Raj.