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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Gaza 'not consulted' over reforms to divorce law
2012-08-24
The eastern and western parts of the Palestinian Territories accelerate on their separate paths.
[Ma'an] Religious authorities in the West Bank failed to consult their counterparts in the Gazoo Strip over proposed changes to divorce laws, the head of Islamic courts in Gazoo said Thursday.

The chief Islamic judge in the West Bank Sheikh Yusef Ideis announced Thursday that the Islamic supreme court would meet Monday to discuss a new law granting women the right to initiate divorce.

The law will come into effect in September, Ideis said in a statement.

But the head of Islamic courts in Gazoo Hassan al-Juju told Ma'an there had been no coordination on the new law. "No one consulted us on this issue."

Al-Juju said Islamic authorities in Gazoo would be happy to study the new law if it was discussed with them, but as they had not been consulted it would only apply in the West Bank.

He added that personal status laws should be unified across the West Bank and Gazoo.

Meanwhile,
...back at the pool hall, Peoria Slim had found another sucker...
member of the Secretariat of the General Union of Paleostinian Women Khawla al-Azraq welcomed the reform which she said would protect women suffering from domestic violence.

The new law follows a rise in incidents in which women were killed by their relatives and husbands in the West Bank, al-Azraq noted.

She told Ma'an that rights campaigners were waiting for the Paleostinian Authority to adopt a new set of personal status laws, drafted by women's groups, to protect women from domestic violence.

Laws in the West Bank and Gazoo are drawn from several legal systems as a result of various foreign occupations. Jordanian law is applied in the West Bank, and Egyptian laws are in force in Gazoo.

Both legislative systems discriminate against women, allowing men to divorce far more easily than women.

Efforts to unify the legislative framework and enact Paleostinian laws have been hampered by Israel's occupation and detention of politicians, and the internal division which led to separate governments in the West Bank and Gazoo Strip.
Posted by:trailing wife

#6  I thought that all Muslim laws were taken directly from the Koran, which was dictated directly from Allah to Mohammed. How is it possible to change one jot or tittle of the law?
Posted by: Rambler in Virginia   2012-08-24 23:21  

#5  Without a paddle.
Posted by: Besoeker   2012-08-24 19:48  

#4  "unified across the West Bank and Gazoo ..."

Does that mean it's Up The Wazoo ?

HAHAHAHAHAHA !!!
Posted by: Raider   2012-08-24 19:46  

#3  Two separate nations, as it were.
Posted by: Pappy   2012-08-24 16:39  

#2  No migration. A Gazan in West Bank, and vice versa, is in almost as much danger as a Jew.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2012-08-24 14:02  

#1  ...but as they had not been consulted it would only apply in the West Bank.

Be interesting to watch the migration.
Posted by: Skidmark   2012-08-24 05:58  

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