Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Muslim veil descends on Iraqi women

The Australian:

Renewed zealotry threatens hard-won rights, writes James Hider

28 jul 05

SUHAIDA Maya never used to wear a hijab, the headscarf that Muslim women don as a mark of religious modesty. An English teacher from Shattra, a town in central Iraq, she always wore whatever she wanted.Now she and her daughter both cover up for fear of the rising number of Islamist puritans in the south.

"We have to cover up," she said, her defiance shown by the bright pink of her unwanted hijab, and the women's rights group she runs. "The Islamic parties even come into schools' sports lessons and tell girls that they have to wear skirts over their tracksuits. It's like being in Iran."

Many women in Iraq, especially in the Shia south, are increasingly concerned that Islamic parties are imposing their strict religious ways on women who once enjoyed some of the most liberal rights in the region.

Leaked drafts of Iraq's forthcoming constitution bear out fears that restrictions on their rights may soon be enshrined in the law. The latest copy of the charter, due to be finalised in three weeks, revealed wording that could roll back a 1959 secular law that enshrined women's equality. Article 19 of the new draft states that "the followers of any religion or sect are free to choose their civil status according to their religious or sectarian beliefs".

In other words, domestic issues, including the issues of divorce and women's inheritance, could fall under Islamic codes that human rights advocates say would make women second-class citizens. Under some rigid interpretations of Islamic law, a husband can divorce his wife merely by stating three times in front of her that their union is terminated.

Women's testimony in court is also given less weight than men's, at a time when rights groups say domestic violence is rising rapidly. Obtaining convictions in rape cases would be particularly difficult, analysts say.

Another problem would be that many Iraqi marriages are mixed, and it was not clear who would decide which sectarian law would resolve domestic disputes. "These are the dark days we are going through," said Yennar Mohammad, the head of the Baghdad-based Organisation of Women's Freedom in Iraq.

"Imagine you have a committee where half the constitution writers are Islamist groups and some of them are nationalist groups with a tribal mentality. We are looking at a committee, or selected misogynist group, that have only one thing in common ... that they want to keep women in an inferior status in this society."

A concern for Ms Mohammad is the possibility of young girls being married off. She said: "Under Islam, when the Prophet married his last wife, she was nine years old. In the United States they give a name to this kind of sexual union. Under Islam this is legal and anyone can do it."

The issue is symbolic of the dilemma facing Western diplomats, who insist that Iraq has the democratic right to write its own constitution, but worry that dominant religious conservatives may use that very freedom to crush democratic development.

Zalman Khalilzad, the new US Ambassador to Iraq, voiced his fears for women's rights. "A society cannot achieve all its potential if it does things that prevents -- weakens the prospects of -- half of its population to make the fullest contribution that it can."

Not all women want equal rights, however. Ethar Moussa, the editor of the magazine Our Eve, sponsored by a leading Shia Islamist party, argues that there is no equality in divine law and creating it could lead to corrupting Western influences.

"When we come to have outright equality, the door would be wide open for many liberties that are basically unacceptable," she said, her face veiled and her body covered. "The Islamic principle states that there should be justice, not outright equality between men and women ... all we want is justice."

That is not enough for Ms Mohammad. She said: "We are practically being turned into slaves by the constitution, by admitting that Islam is the formal religion of the country and by handing over the writing of it ... to a bunch of religious bigots who want to see women inferior in society."

Women's advocacy groups have started demonstrating publicly, but fear their lobbying is being overshadowed by more pressing issues. "Unfortunately we don't have a militia," Masoon al-Denuchi, Deputy Minister of Culture and president of the Iraqi Women's Group, said bitterly.

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