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A proposed law in Iraq could legalise marriage for children as young as nine

A proposed law in Iraq could legalise marriage for children as young as nine
Iraq has proposed an amendment to personal status law which could lower the marriage age to nine, prompting an outcry by campaigners regarding it a flagrant violation of women's rights.
3 min read
15 November, 2017
Iraqi women campaigning against the proposed amendment to legalise child marriage [Equality Now]
Conservative Iraqi lawmakers are proposing to amend legislation which could see the marital age reduced from 18 to nine years old, prompting outcry from rights campaigners.

The proposal, an amendment to Iraq's personal status law, would allow clerics of Muslim sects to govern marriage contracts and hear cases in religious, rather than state-run, courts.

Currently the minimum marriage age in Iraq is 18 years, but can be lowered to 15 in "special circumstances".

Some religious sects in Iraq believe the wife of the prophet Muhammad was aged nine, and say children of that age can marry, while others believe children can do so when they reach puberty.

The draft is seen by many as a political manoeuvre ahead of the upcoming Iraqi elections in May next year, which could potentially put Shia parties in the lead, if they succeed in applying Shia Jaafari interpretation of Islamic law.

But Iraqi women across all sects and ethnicities are campaigning against what they call a flagrant violation and backward step for the rights of girls and women.

"This amendment was tried by Islamic parties in 2014, but it failed miserably because of the strong opposition within the parliament.

"Today, the same parties are returning to parliament, exploiting the security situation of the country and the public's preoccupation with the deteriorating security situation in the north of the country," women's rights activist Zeinab al-Waeli told °®Âþµº.

The amendment that was proposed in 2014 included other, more extreme, violations of women's rights such as the legalisation of marital rape and the need for permission to leave the house.

Waeli branded the proposed amendment a major disaster for girls and women who could be "bought and sold by clerics and tribal sheikhs".

Read also: Interview: The struggles of being a feminist in the Middle East

She called for international pressure to be put on Baghdad to prevent clerics from dominating the legal authorities In Iraq and the rule of "one-sect jurisprudence".

Women's rights organisation Equality Now says it would see the change as "a complete violation of these girls' human rights and could destroy their lives".

"Iraq must be held to its commitments under international law to end child marriage and not pass this bill," she said.

Iraqi women want more rights, not the questioning [of] the limited ones that exist

Equality Now is working with partners on the ground in Iraq to address the issue and broader women's rights violations in Iraq.

Other amendments to the personal status law could affect women's rights in the country.

The original personal status law grants mothers the right to custody and gives wives the right to inherit their husband's estate, while the religious jurisprudence says the custody of children is a matter for the father and that women do not have the right to inherit real estate or land.

The Iraqi Transnational Collective (ITC), which describes itself as a "grassroots collective of transnational Iraqis with a mission of building community power for political, social and economic justice" has also started a to campaign against the amendments.

"Iraqi women want more rights, not the questioning [of] the limited ones that exist," the organisation said.

On November 1, Iraq's council of representatives voted in principle to approve the new amendment, and it has been signed by 40 parliamentarians.

The draft is not yet on the agenda in parliament and the timing of the vote is unclear.

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