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Iraqi Constitution May Curb Women's
Rights
By EDWARD WONG
July 20, 2005 - (New York Times) A working draft
of Iraq's new constitution would cede a strong role to Islamic law
and could sharply curb women's rights, particularly in personal
matters like divorce and family inheritance.
The document's writers are also debating whether
to drop or phase out a measure enshrined in the interim constitution,
co-written last year by the Americans, requiring that women make
up at least a quarter of the parliament.
The draft of a chapter of the new constitution obtained
by The New York Times on Tuesday guarantees equal rights for women
as long as those rights do not "violate Shariah," or Koranic
law.
The Americans and secular Iraqis banished such explicit
references to religious law from the interim constitution adopted
early last year.
The draft chapter, circulated discreetly in recent
days, has ignited outrage among women's groups, which held a protest
on Tuesday morning in downtown Baghdad at the square where a statue
of Saddam Hussein was pulled down by American marines in April 2003.
One of the critical passages is in Article 14 of
the chapter, a sweeping measure that would require court cases dealing
with matters like marriage, divorce and inheritance to be judged
according to the law practiced by the family's sect or religion.
Under that measure, Shiite women in Iraq, no matter
what their age, generally could not marry without their families'
permission. Under some interpretations of Shariah, men could attain
a divorce simply by stating their intention three times in their
wives' presence.
Article 14 would replace a body of Iraqi law that
has for decades been considered one of the most progressive in the
Middle East in protecting the rights of women, giving them the freedom
to choose a husband and requiring divorce cases to be decided by
a judge.
If adopted, the shift away from the more secular
and egalitarian provisions of the interim constitution would be
a major victory for Shiite clerics and religious politicians, who
chafed at the Americans' insistence that Islam be designated in
the interim constitution as just "a source" of legislation.
Several writers of the new constitution say they intend, at the
very least, to designate Islam as "a main source" of legislation.
By rough count, nearly 200 women and men showed
up in the fiery heat to hand out fliers and wave white banners in
a throng of traffic. "We want to be equal to everybody - we
want human rights for everybody," read one slogan. The demonstration
came hours before two Sunni Arabs involved in writing the constitution
were fatally shot near a Baghdad restaurant, threatening to throw
the drafting process into turmoil.
"We want a guarantee of women's rights in the
new constitution," said Hannah Edwar, an organizer of the protest.
"We're going to meet with the constitutional committee and
make our thoughts known."
A dozen women, some sheathed in full-length black
robes, showed up to denounce Ms. Edwar's protest. They said they
were followers of Moktada al-Sadr, the fundamentalist Shiite cleric
who has led two rebellions against the Americans.
American and Iraqi officials say that several draft
chapters of the constitution are floating around Baghdad and that
no final language has been agreed on. Changes can still be made
before Aug. 15, the deadline for the National Assembly to approve
a draft. Protests by women and relatively secular blocs on the constitutional
committee, like the Kurds, may force Shiite members to tone down
the religious language.
"Some of the points regarding women's rights
in this chapter are still to be reviewed," said Mariam Arayess,
a religious Shiite on the committee.
Ms. Arayess said she believed that the draft was
the most recent working version, and that it had fairly generous
provisions for equal rights. She is one of fewer than 10 women on
the 71-member drafting committee.
The chapter has 27 articles, most of which have
relatively liberal provisions aimed at ensuring various civil rights.
The first says that "all Iraqis are equal before the law"
and that "equal opportunities are guaranteed for all citizens
according to the law." The final article forbids censorship
of the press.
References to Islam and Shariah appear in a few
places. One clause says Iraqis will enjoy all rights stated in "international
treaties and conventions as long as they do not contradict Islam."
Such language is accepted by many Iraqis, including moderates, who
say Islam is a vital foundation for the country.
But women's groups are incensed by Article 14, which
would repeal a relatively liberal personal status law enacted in
1959 after the British-backed monarchy was overthrown by secular
military officers. That law remained in effect through the decades
of Mr. Hussein's rule.
The law used Shariah to adjudicate personal and
family matters, but did it in as secular a manner as possible, pulling
together the most liberal interpretations of Koranic law from the
main Shiite and Sunni sects and stitching them together into one
code.
Critics of the draft proposal say that in addition
to restricting women's rights, it could also deepen the sectarian
divide between Sunnis and Shiites. The draft also does not make
clear what would happen in cases where the husband is from one sect
and the wife from another.
Religious Shiite politicians tried once before,
in December 2003, to abolish the 1959 law. As is happening now,
women's groups and secular female politicians took to the streets.
Faced with the mini-rebellion, L. Paul Bremer III,
then the effective American proconsul of Iraq, rebuffed the move,
to the anger and dismay of many religious Shiites.
"We don't want to use separate Sunni or Shiite
laws," said Dohar Rouhi, president of the Association of Women
Entrepreneurs. "We want a law that can be applied to everyone.
We want justice for women."
A Westerner familiar with the writing of the constitution
said that when he saw a draft of the civil rights section less than
a week ago, it did not contain the sweeping language on personal
status law. In that version, he said, most measures - even those
citing Shariah - were not as severe as they could have been.
"Compared to what some of the conservative
Shiites were pushing, the glass is half full," said the Westerner,
who would speak only on condition of anonymity, because he did not
want to appear to be interfering in a sovereign Iraqi process.
He said there was some cause for alarm, though,
pointing to a proposal to phase out a measure in the interim constitution
requiring that a quarter of parliamentary seats go to women.
Ms. Arayess, the Shiite drafter, said some of the
writers were considering keeping the quota for the next two terms
of the parliament before allowing it to lapse. After that, she said,
women should be able to stand on their own.
From: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/20/international/middleeast/20women.html?
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