Starting with Iraq and specifically women and girls in Iraq. So we're all on the same page, let's drop back to July 29th:
That
law and other customs which protected the rights of women went out the
window after the US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq. US 'help' --
real or pretend -- rarely helps those in need. It didn't help Iraqi
women when the US government put cowardly fundamentalists in charge of
Iraq (cowardly because they'd all fled Iraq and only returned after the
US invaded). Instead of backing freedom and rights, the US focused on
advancing crooks and cretins who they hoped would sign away Iraq's
rights to oil. THE WEEK notes, "After youth protests erupted across Iraq in 2019, politicians 'saw that
the role of women had begun to strengthen in society', Nadia Mahmood,
co-founder of the Aman Women's Alliance, told
The Guardian. 'They felt that feminist, gender and women’s organisations, plus civil
society and activist movements, posed a threat to their power and
status'."
Cathrin Schaer (FRANCE 24) adds, "The other big problem is how the choice could divide Iraqi society.
While the current law applies to all Iraqis equally, separate legal
systems could inflame societal and sectarian tensions and degrade the
status of Iraq's judiciary."
ANHA notes a statement from Iraqi women opposed to proposal who are calling "on all institutions and organizations
advocating for women's and children's rights in Iraq to raise their
voices against these legal amendments. It stressed that 'a 9-year-old
girl’s place is not in marriage and childbirth, but in playing in parks
and attending school.' The women urged for the cancellation of this
decision before it is approved and called on Iraqi society to oppose
these amendments that threaten women's rights and dignity."
At Brookings, Marsin Alshamary observes, "Iraqi women have more rights than many of their regional counterparts,
but they must constantly battle to preserve them. In response to the
proposed bill, activists, politicians, and lawyers formed
Coalition 188 (named after the original PSL) and demonstrated throughout Iraq. Female legislators and policymakers including
Nour Nafea, who
emerged from the 2019 protest movement -- and veteran politician Ala Talabani -- have worked tirelessly to protest the law." And
Christina Lamb (SUNDAY TIMES OF LONDON) provides this context, "It’s not the first time Iraqi lawmakers
have tried this -- previous attempts were blocked. But the country's
political system is dominated by conservative Shia Muslim parties who
form the largest coalition in parliament and have been pushing to erode
women's and LGBT rights. In April they made same-sex relationships
punishable with up to 15 years' imprisonment. Initially they were trying
to impose the death penalty. The law also criminalised transgender
people and what it called 'intentional practice of effeminacy'."
Iraq’s parliament is moving forward an amendment
to the country’s Personal Status Law that would allow Iraqi religious
authorities, rather than state law, to govern marriage and inheritance
matters at the expense of fundamental rights, Human Rights Watch said
today. The Iraqi parliament, which completed its first reading of the
bill on August 4, 2023, will have two more readings of the bill and a
debate before deciding whether to vote it into law.
If passed, the
amendment would have disastrous effects on women’s and girls’ rights
guaranteed under international law by allowing marriage for girls as
young as 9, undermining the principle of equality under Iraqi law, and
removing protections for women regarding divorce and inheritance. Child
marriage puts girls at increased risk of sexual and physical violence,
adverse physical and mental health consequences, and being denied access
to education and employment.
“The Iraqi parliament’s passage of
this bill would be a devastating step backward for Iraqi women and girls
and the rights they have fought hard to enshrine in law,” said Sarah Sanbar,
Iraq researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Formally legalizing child
marriage would rob countless girls of their futures and well-being.
Girls belong in school and on the playground, not in a wedding dress.”
The
draft amendment would legalize, rather than try to reverse, Iraq’s
significant and growing child marriage problem, Human Rights Watch
said.
Iraqi rights groups and activists have taken to the streets to protest the amendment, and a group of more than 15 women parliament members
from diverse parties have come together to oppose its passage.
Parliament proposed similar amendments to the Personal Status Law in 2014 and again in 2017, both of which failed to pass.
Under
the draft amendment, couples concluding a marriage contract could
choose whether the provisions of the Personal Status Law or the
provisions of specific Islamic schools of jurisprudence would apply. If
couples are from different sects, the school followed by the husband’s
sect would apply.
This arrangement would effectively establish
separate legal regimes with different rights accorded to different
sects. It would further enshrine sectarianism in Iraq, undermining the
right to legal equality for all Iraqis found in article 14 of the constitution and international human rights law.
For instance, the Jaafari school of law, which many Shia Muslims in Iraq follow, allows
for girls as young as 9 and boys as young as 15 to be married. The
Personal Status Law sets the legal age for marriage at 18, or 15 with a
judge’s permission and depending on the child’s “maturity and physical
capacity,” which already contravenes international legal standards and
best practices.
The draft amendment would also authenticate
unregistered marriages, which are conducted by religious leaders but not
registered with personal status courts and are illegal
under the current Personal Status Law. The amendment would also remove
criminal punishments for men entering into these marriages and allow
religious leaders, rather than the courts, to finalize marriages.
Unregistered
marriages are already a loophole enabling child marriage in Iraq, where
child marriage rates have been rising over the last 20 years, a March
2024 report by Human Rights Watch found. The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) reported that 28 percent of girls in Iraq are married before age 18. According to the UN Assistance Mission in Iraq, 22 percent of unregistered marriages involved girls under age 14.
Unregistered
marriages also have extremely harmful effects on women and girls’
ability to obtain government services, register their children’s birth,
and claim their rights, Human Rights Watch said.
Without a civil marriage certificate, women and girls are unable to
give birth in hospitals, itself an unjust obstruction to health care,
and are forced to give birth at home with limited access to emergency
obstetric services. This increases the risk of medical complications
that threaten the life of both the mother and her baby. Children and
young women are especially vulnerable to some pregnancy complications.
The
amendment would also remove and undermine protections for divorced
women. Under the existing Personal Status Law, if a husband requests a
divorce, the wife has the right to remain in their marital home for
three years at the husband’s expense and to receive two years of spousal
maintenance and the current value of her dowry. If a wife requests a
divorce, a judge can award her some of these benefits depending on the
circumstances.
If religious law were applied, women would lose
many of these protections. For example, under the Jaafari school of law,
a woman who gets divorced
has no right to the marital home, maintenance, or her dowry, and
children would continue living with her for only two years, regardless
of their age, contingent on her not remarrying.
Women would also
lose some inheritance rights. Even under existing law, daughters inherit
a lower proportion of a parent’s wealth than sons. But under some religious laws, daughters would inherit even less, and if a family has no son to inherit the agricultural land, it would revert to the state.
Finally,
the amendment stipulates that the Scholar Council of the Shia Endowment
Office and the Fatwa Council of the Sunni Endowment Office will develop
a “code of Sharia [Islamic law] rulings on personal status matters” and
submit it to the house of representatives within six months from the
date of entry into force of the law.
This would mean lawmakers
and the general public would not have a chance to review or vote on the
code before it becomes law, removing democratic oversight and granting
disproportionate power to religious authorities in setting the law,
Human Rights Watch said.
The proposed amendment was introduced by
Raad al-Maliki, an independent member of parliament who also introduced
the amendment to Iraq’s Law on Combatting Prostitution that criminalized same-sex relations,
gender-affirming medical interventions, and “promoting homosexuality,”
which passed in April 2024.The law violates fundamental human rights,
including the rights to freedom of expression, association, privacy,
equality, and nondiscrimination of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and
transgender (LGBT) people in Iraq.
The proposed amendment would violate the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW),
which Iraq ratified in 1986, by depriving women and girls of their
rights on the basis of their gender. The amendment also violates the Convention on Rights of the Child,
which Iraq ratified in 1994, by legalizing child marriage, putting
girls at risk of forced and early marriage, leaving them susceptible to
sexual abuse, and not requiring decisions about children in divorce
cases to be made in the best interests of the child.
The draft
amendment appears to violate the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights by depriving certain people of their rights on the basis
of their religion.
“Iraqi parliamentarians should reject efforts
to strip women and girls of their legal protections and refuse to undo
decades of hard-won rights,” Sanbar said. “Failure to do so means
current and future generations of Iraqi women will remain strangled by
an oppressive patriarchal legal system.”