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Afghanistan |
Afghanistan passes law against Shia women |
2009-08-15 |
![]() There was no official announcement and government officials could not be immediately reached to confirm the legislation's publication. Karzai in April ordered the justice ministry to review the legislation, which he had already signed in March, after an outcry from Afghan and international groups which said it legalised Taliban-era restrictions on women. However, the justice ministry has not announced the results of its review. Karzai, who is expected to win a second term at an election on August 20, said that any article which violated women's rights would be removed. But Human Rights Watch said it had seen a final copy of the law and it contained 'many regressive articles' while not being as severe as a draft version. These include giving a husband the right to withdraw basic maintenance from his wife, including food, if she refuses his sexual demands and that guardianship of children is granted only to fathers and grandfathers. It also requires women to get permission from their husbands to work and effectively allows a rapist to avoid prosecution by paying 'blood money' to the affected girl, the New York-based group said. It accused Karzai of an 'unthinkable' election deal with hardline Shia leaders who wanted special legislation to cover family matters for their minority, in return for the support of fundamentalists at the ballot box. Shias make up around 15 per cent of Afghanistan's population. |
Posted by:Fred |