Khaleej Times

Lebanon rises up against rape-wedding law

- AFP

beirut — Lebanese activists ramped up their campaign to scrap a controvers­ial law allowing rapists who marry their victims to go free, with a dramatic installati­on on Saturday along Beirut’s sunny seaside.

A proposal to scrap Article 522 of the penal code — which deals with rape, assault, kidnapping and forced marriage — was introduced last year and approved by a parliament­ary committee in February.

It will go before parliament on May 15 and activists hope that MPs will vote to eliminate it.

On Saturday they urged Lebanese citizens to sign a campaign to ramp up the pressure on legislator­s at an open-air exhibit.

Thirty-one wedding dresses made of white lace and wrapping paper hung limply from makeshift nooses between four palm trees along the Lebanese capital’s corniche.

“There are 31 days in a month and every single day, a woman may be raped and forced to marry her rapist,” said Alia Awada, advocacy manager at Lebanese non-government organisati­on ABAAD.

“We are trying as much as we can to shed light on this issue and tell parliament that the time has come for them to vote on cancelling Article 522.”

The reviled article, which also deals with the rape of minors, allows offenders to escape punishment by wedding their victims.

“If a valid marriage contract exists between the perpetrato­r of one of these crimes... and the abused, the prosecutio­n is suspended,” it reads.

“If a verdict has been issued, the implementa­tion is suspended.”

Awada said: “We called on all parliament­arians and decisionma­kers in the Lebanese state with this message: every ‘yes’ from you is a ‘no’ to a rapist.”

Standing amid the fluttering wedding dresses, Minister for Women’s Affairs Jean Oghassabia­n described the article as being “from the stone age”.

“Its turn has come, it’s the second item on the agenda” at an upcoming legislativ­e session on May 15, Oghassabia­n, who is also an MP, said.

Lebanese artist Mireille Honein, who designed the exhibition in Paris and brought it to her homeland this week, said she made the dresses out of white paper “to highlight the ephemeral nature of marriage and of laws”. —

 ?? AFP ?? A woman walks past a veiled woman sitting on a bench near an installati­on of wedding dresses by Lebanese artist Mireille Honein and Abaad NGO at Beirut’s Corniche. —
AFP A woman walks past a veiled woman sitting on a bench near an installati­on of wedding dresses by Lebanese artist Mireille Honein and Abaad NGO at Beirut’s Corniche. —

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