Daily Trust

Tunisia lifts ban on Muslim women marrying non-Muslims

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Tunisia has abolished a decades-old ban on Muslim women marrying nonMuslims as the president seeks to secure equal rights for the country’s female population.

“Congratula­tions to the women of Tunisia for the enshrineme­nt of the right to the freedom to choose one’s spouse,” presidency spokeswoma­n Saida Garrach wrote on Facebook on Thursday.

The announceme­nt came a month after President Beji Caid Essebsi called for the government to lift the ban dating back to 1973, arguing that existing practice violates Tunisia’s constituti­on, adopted in 2014 in the wake of the Arab Spring revolution.

He created a commission led by a woman lawyer and rights activists aimed at drafting revised rules.

Until now a non-Muslim man who wished to marry a Tunisian woman had to convert to Islam and submit a certificat­e of his conversion as proof while a Tunisian man is allowed to marry a nonMuslim woman.

Human rights groups in the North African country had campaigned for the ban’s abolition, saying it undermined the fundamenta­l human right to choose a spouse.

Tunisia is viewed as being ahead of most Arab countries on women’s rights, but there is still discrimina­tion particular­ly in matters of inheritanc­e.

The country’s leading imams and theologian­s have issued a statement denouncing the president’s proposals as a “flagrant violation of the precepts” of Islam. (Aljazeera)

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