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Iraq
Kurdish parliament defies Baghdad
2004-02-07
The Kurdish parliament decided today (Feb 5) not to recognize a Governing Council decision to change rules on divorce and other family issues - a move that outraged some Iraqi women who saw it as a setback for women's rights here. In December, under the rotating presidency of Shiite cleric Abdel-Aziz al-Hakim, the council voted to abolish the law regulating marriage, divorce, child custody and inheritance, instead allowing different religious groups to apply their own traditions. The Kurdish parliament said in a statement it was sticking to a family law passed in 1959 and the amendments that the Kurdish administrations have introduced to it. The council's December decision raised strong opposition even among some of its own members. The decision has not been approved by U.S. administrator L. Paul Bremer, who wields a veto.
And should not be...
Council member Mahmoud Othman, a Sunni Kurd, said the Governing Council decision was hasty and should have been deliberated with experts and women's organizations first. The decision passed by a slight majority instead of the necessary two-thirds, he said. Under the secular Baath party of Saddam Hussein, Iraqi women enjoyed more rights - in education, the workplace and marital status - than those in many other Arab countries. Kurdish women, living under their own regional governments since 1991, have campaigned against the Governing Council decision. However, some women's groups fear that the new influence of the conservative Islamic clergy since the collapse of Saddam's regime threatens the status of women in the future Iraq.
Posted by:Fred Pruitt

#4  Those damned Kurish infidels. How are they dance with women whose faces are exposed.
Posted by: dataman1   2004-2-7 5:43:12 PM  

#3  I saw a picture on BBC's site. Unveiled smiling Kurdish women dancing alongside with men. They were in a line alternating men and women and each one was in contact with the two persons of the opposite sex at his side. Can you imagine a Saudi or Taliban reaction to the picture? Instant heart attack.

After seeing this picture I thought there is still hope for the Kurds.
Posted by: JFM   2004-2-7 2:12:45 PM  

#2  Charles, gotta let the fruit ripen before you pick it. Bremer will veto it if necessary, but (I suspect) he'd like the Iraqis to learn to reconsider bad decisions and fix them on their own. Part of developing a working democracy.
Posted by: Steve White   2004-2-7 1:33:52 PM  

#1  The Kurds are trying to force Bremer to veto the decision. At least one group in Iraq is willing to stand up for womens rights, and it hasn't been the US. I find it disgraceful that Bremer hasn't vetoed the Sharia ruling yet.
Posted by: Charles   2004-2-7 12:51:53 PM  

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