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5/18/13, "Afghanistan fails to pass law banning violence against women," Reuters via csmonitor.com,
"A law banning violence against women, considered a major step forward
in women's rights in Afghanistan, failed to pass parliament. The law
would have also created shelters for abused women, and limited the
number of wives permitted to two."
"Afghanistan's
parliament failed to pass a law on Saturday banning violence against
women, a severe blow to progress made in women's rights in the
conservative Muslim country since the Islamist Taliban was toppled over a decade ago.
President Hamid Karzai
approved the law by decree in 2009 and parliament's endorsement was
required. But a rift between conservative and more secular members of
the assembly resulted in debate being deferred to a later date.
Religious
members objected to at least eight articles in the legislation,
including keeping the legal age for women to marry at 16, the existence
of shelters for domestic abuse victims and the halving of the number of
wives permitted to two....
Increasing
insecurity is deterring some women from seeking work outside the home,
and rights workers accuse the government of doing too little to protect
women - allegations rejected by Karzai's administration.
"2014 is
coming, change is coming, and the future of women in this country is
uncertain. A new president will come and if he doesn't take women's
rights seriously he can change the decree," Koofi said of the
Elimination of Violence Against Women Law, which goes by the acronym
EVAL.
The election for a new president is expected to be held in April 2014. The constitution bars Karzai from running again.
After almost two hours of clashes between Koofi and the more
religious members of the 244-member parliament, speaker Abdul Rauf
Ibrahimi said the assembly would consider the law again at a later date,
but declined to say when.....
Many lawmakers, most of them male, cited violations of Islamic, or Sharia law.
"It
is wrong that a woman and man cannot marry off their child until she is
16," said Obaidullah Barekzai, a member from southeast Uruzgan province, where female literacy rates are among the lowest in the country. An Afghan man must be at least 18 years old to marry.
Barekzai argued against all age limits for women, citing historical figure Hazrat Abu Bakr Siddiq, a close companion of the Prophet Mohammad, who married off his daughter at age seven.
At
least eight other lawmakers, mostly from the Ulema Council, a
government-appointed body of clerics, joined him in decrying the EVAL as
un-Islamic.
Abdul Sattar Khawasi, member for Kapisa province,
called women's shelters "morally corrupt". Justice Minister Habibullah
Ghaleb last year dismissed them as houses of "prostitution and
immorality", provoking fierce condemnation from women's groups."
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