The Manila Times

Bill that seeks to lift minimum marrying age stirs outrage in Iraq

- AFP

BAGHDAD: A proposal in Iraq’s parliament to scrap the minimum age for Muslim girls to marry has stirred outrage among critics who view it as a license “to rape children.”

Conservati­ve Shiite deputies on to a 1959 law that set the minimum age for marriage at 18.

The initial legislatio­n, passed shortly after the fall of the Iraqi monarchy, transferre­d the right to decide on family affairs from religious authoritie­s to the state and its judiciary.

But now the new bill looks to go back on that—and would authorize the marriage of any girl if it had the consent of the religious leaders from the Shiite or Sunni Muslim community to which her parents belong.

In effect, it makes “the opinion of the Shiite and Sunni ulema (scholars) obligatory for judges”, said a liberal independen­t MP, Faiq al-Sheikh, a member of Iraq’s legal commission.

Historical­ly, he recalled, Islam has allowed the marriage of pubescent girls from the age of nine, the same as Aisha when she is believed to have been married to the Prophet Mohammed.

with criticism of the parliament­ary bill, ranging from outright indignatio­n to black humor, with anger also rife on the streets.

“It’s a law worthy of the Islamic State ( jihadist group) that provides legal cover to the rape of children,” Hadi Abbas, an army retiree in the southern city of Kut, told Agence France-Presse.

Ali Lefta, a 40-year-old teacher in the port city of Basra, said it amounted to “the murder of the innocence of children” and that the bill was “the latest in a string of stupid laws based on tribal and confession­al modes of thinking”.

‘Back to Middle Ages’

In defense of the bill sponsored by his party, Ammar Toama, who heads the Shiite parliament­ary group Fadila, said it “makes no mention of age and stipulates only that she (bride) must be pubescent, capable of deciding, and have the accord of her tutor and a judge.”

Under the Iraqi constituti­on, citizens have to declare their religious and inheritanc­e terms for Shiites differ from those for Sunnis.

Toama said the bill’s aim was to bring the law “in line with the beliefs” of practising Muslims.

But foreign missions in Baghdad and the United Nations have been up in arms, warning against institutio­nalized discrimina­tion against women and girls.

mother of three girls, also remain opposed and have taken to mocking the priorities of parliament­arians.

“We have war, crises, unemployme­nt, and yet our parliament is busy with laws that violate chil- dren’s rights!” she fumed. “The Islamists want to take us back to the Middle Ages.”

Majeda al-Tamimi, a woman leg many of her colleagues in parliament would oppose the bill.

But whether it passes or not, women like Umm Mohammed in the conservati­ve rural province of Zi Qar, who wed at the age of 14, said marriage was a family affair.

their daughter has reached puberty and at what age she can marry,” said the 65-year-old Iraqi.

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