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BBC NEWS, April 12, 2005
Saudi Arabia
bans forced marriage
Saudi Arabia's top religious authority has banned
the practice of forcing women to marry against
their will.
Grand mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz al-Sheikh said
forced marriage was against Islamic law and
those responsible for it should be jailed.
A high number of forced marriages in Saudi Arabia
is believed to be a factor in the country's
steep divorce rate.
The ban is a significant victory for women's
rights in Saudi Arabia, where females face
a range of restrictions.
'Un-Islamic'
Sheikh Abdul Aziz, who heads the Council of Senior
Ulema (Scholars) said: "Forcing a woman
to marry someone she does not want and preventing
her from wedding that whom she chooses... is
not permissible" under Islamic law.
He said fathers who coerce daughters into in
marriage should be jailed and not released
"until they change their minds".
According to Saudi media, about half of marriages
in the country end in divorce, the Associated
Press news agency reported.
Women are subject to number of restrictions in
the kingdom - an absolute monarchy, governed
according to a highly conservative interpretation
of Islamic Sharia law.
They are obliged to wear a veil and are not permitted
to travel alone or mix with men other than
relatives.
Women were not able to obtain separate identity
cards until 2001, and even then only with the
permission of a male relative.
They do not have the right to vote or run for
public office and, until June this year, were
forbidden from working in most jobs.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/4437667.stm
Published: 2005/04/12 15:35:30 GMT
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