Sunday, November 10, 2024 - Iraq is poised to slash the legal age of consent from 18 to nine, allowing men to marry young children.
The proposed legal change also deprives women of rights to
divorce, child custody and inheritance.
Iraq’s parliament, which is dominated by a coalition of
conservative Shia Muslim parties, is preparing to vote through an amendment
that would overturn the country’s “personal status law”.
The legislation, also known as Law 188, was heralded as one
of the most progressive in the Middle East when it was introduced in 1959 and
provides an overarching set of rules governing the affairs of Iraqi families,
regardless of their religious sect.
As well as bringing down the legal marriage age, the
amendment would also remove women’s rights to divorce, child custody and
inheritance.
The governing coalition says the move aligns with a strict
interpretation of Islamic law and is intended to protect young girls from
“immoral relationships”.
The second reading of the amendment to Law 188 was passed on
September 16
It isn’t the first time Shia parties in Iraq have tried to
amend the personal status law – attempts to change it failed in 2014 and 2017,
largely due to a backlash from Iraqi women.
But the coalition now has a large parliamentary majority and
is on the brink of pushing the amendment over the line, said Dr Renad Mansour,
a senior research fellow at Chatham House.
“It’s the closest it’s ever been,” he told The Telegraph.
“It has more momentum than it’s ever had, primarily because of the Shia
parties,” he said.
“It’s not all Shia parties, it’s just the specific ones that
are empowered and are really pushing it.”
Dr Renad added that the proposed amendment was part of a
wider political move by Shia Islamist groups to “consolidate their power” and
regain legitimacy.
“Stressing the religious side is a way for them to try and
regain some of the ideological legitimacy that has been waning over the last
few years,” he told The Telegraph.
It is not yet clear exactly when the amendment will go
before parliament for a vote, but it could come at any moment, he said.
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