Gulf News

Women seek scrapping of ‘marry your rapist’ law

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Iraqi women are ramping up pressure to abolish a law that lets rapists off the hook if they marry their victims, after Tunisia, Jordan and Lebanon scrapped similar articles last year.

Activists plan to demonstrat­e and use billboards to condemn the controvers­ial law ahead of May parliament­ary elections in the predominat­ely Shiite, conservati­ve society.

“We want to say to the Iraqi government — give women justice,” Rasha Khalid, a lawyer and member of Baghdad Women’s Associatio­n, a local rights group, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from the capital.

“Iraq has to keep up with its surroundin­g neighbours like Tunisia and Lebanon and other countries that abolished this law.”

Egypt repealed its law in 1999, and Morocco overhauled its law in 2014 following the suicide of a 16-yearold girl and the attempted suicide of a 15-year-old, both of whom were forced to marry their rapists.

‘Mass pressure’

Khalid wants to raise awareness so that voters can demand change going into the polls, as Iraq struggles to recover from a three-year war with Daesh terrorists. Intisar Al Jubory, who has pushed for the amendment to be put on parliament’s agenda, said “mass pressure” is needed. “The repeal of this article preserves the dignity of women victims (against) the greatest humanitari­an crime of rape,” the parliament­arian said.

Women are often forced to marry their rapist to protect family honour and avoid societal shame, said Suad Abu Dayyeh, Middle East consultant for the rights group Equality Now, urging reform to end the “re-victimisat­ion” of women. “It is a clear violation of their rights,” she said by phone, adding that the law rewards men for committing rape.

“I was under constant stress, unhappy, feeling disgusted,” Sabiha, a 32-yearold Iraqi woman who was pressured into marrying her rapist, a relative, told Equality Now.

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