The kit contains two months worth of condoms, daily and weekly contraceptive pills, two pregnancy kits packed into a gift box. Along with these, the officials have also given a mirror, two packets of bindis, two towels and two handkerchiefs. (Express Photo)
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Condoms, birth control pills in ‘wedding kit’ trigger row in MP
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A mass wedding event held in Madhya Pradesh’s Jhabua district under the government’s wedding scheme for economically weaker sections got embroiled in a controversy after over 200 newly-wed couples were gifted make-up boxes containing condoms and contraceptive pills.
The event was organised under Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan’s Mukhyamantri Kanya Vivah/Nikah Yojana in Thandla where 296 couples got married.
Senior district official Bhursingh Rawat blamed the state health department, saying health officials distributed condoms and contraceptives as part of an awareness programme related to family planning.
“We are not responsible for distributing condoms and contraceptive pills. There is no provision in the Mukhyamantri Kanya Vivah for the provision of such a kit. We have told the local administration officials to keep a check on this in future and conduct a door-to-door campaign instead of distributing condoms at a mass wedding event. This is a tribal area with low literacy rate. People don’t have a lot of scientific temperament, so keeping that in view we will make sure this doesn’t happen again,” Rawat told The Indian Express.
Dr Ashok Patel, district family and welfare officer, told The Indian Express: “There was confusion at the event. We saw over 200 newly-weds at one place and thought we could target them. We had over 200 of our own health workers who educated them on the kit. But some people could not understand… there were couples who thought this was a part of dowry… It would take us over one month to track them all down and distribute these kits,” the officer said. The ‘Nai pahal’ kit is provided to newly married couples by the local ASHA workers.
The purpose of the kit is to impart best practices for family planning, “motivate newly married people to keep a gap (up to 2 years) after the birth of the first child after marriage using temporary family planning means” and has been distributed by the local health department for the past one year.
The kit contains two months worth of condoms, daily and weekly contraceptive pills, two pregnancy kits packed into a gift box. Along with these, the officials have also given a mirror, two packets of bindis, two towels and two handkerchiefs.
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The Madhya Pradesh government launched the Mukhyamantri Kanya Vivah/Nikah Yojana in April 2006 to provide financial assistance for wedding of women from economically weaker sections. Under the scheme, the government provides Rs 55,000 to the bride’s family. Last month, the scheme came under fire after some brides were made to take pregnancy tests at a mass wedding event in Gadsarai area of Dindori.
Following the distribution of the “nai pahal” kit, the Congress targeted CM Chouhan. “Will BJP leaders reveal to the public what they gifted their daughters after their marriage? Why is it that only when it comes to tribal people they are publicly subjected to this? Is there no right to privacy left for them? In the past as well, mass pregnancy tests were carried out in this region by the administration,” said Congress spokesman Piyush Babele.
Anand Mohan J is an award-winning Senior Correspondent for The Indian Express, currently leading the bureau’s coverage of Madhya Pradesh. With a career spanning over eight years, he has established himself as a trusted voice at the intersection of law, internal security, and public policy.
Based in Bhopal, Anand is widely recognized for his authoritative reporting on Maoist insurgency in Central India. In late 2025, he provided exclusive, ground-level coverage of the historic surrender of the final Maoist cadres in Madhya Pradesh, detailing the backchannel negotiations and the "vacuum of command" that led to the state being declared Maoist-free.
Expertise and Reporting Beats
Anand’s investigative work is characterized by a "Journalism of Courage" approach, holding institutions accountable through deep-dive analysis of several key sectors:
National Security & Counter-Insurgency: He is a primary chronicler of the decline of Naxalism in the Central Indian corridor, documenting the tactical shifts of security forces and the rehabilitation of surrendered cadres.
Judiciary & Legal Accountability: Drawing on over four years of experience covering Delhi’s trial courts and the Madhya Pradesh High Court, Anand deconstructs complex legal rulings. He has exposed critical institutional lapses, including custodial safety violations and the misuse of the National Security Act (NSA).
Wildlife Conservation (Project Cheetah): Anand is a leading reporter on Project Cheetah at Kuno National Park. He has provided extensive coverage of the biological and administrative hurdles of rewilding Namibian and South African cheetahs, as well as high-profile cases of wildlife trafficking.
Public Health & Social Safety: His recent investigative work has uncovered systemic negligence in public services, such as contaminated blood transfusions causing HIV infections in thalassemia patients and the human cost of the fertilizer crisis affecting rural farmers.
Professional Background
Tenure: Joined The Indian Express in 2017.
Locations: Transitioned from the high-pressure Delhi City beat (covering courts, police, and labor issues) to his current role as a regional lead in Madhya Pradesh.
Notable Investigations: * Exposed the "digital arrest" scams targeting entrepreneurs.
Investigated the Bandhavgarh elephant deaths and the impact of kodo millet fungus on local wildlife.
Documented the transition of power and welfare schemes (like Ladli Behna) in Madhya Pradesh governance.
Digital & Professional Presence
Author Profile: Anand Mohan J at Indian Express
Twitter handle: @mohanreports ... Read More