Showing posts with label unmarried teenagers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unmarried teenagers. Show all posts

Friday, June 22, 2012

Of Law, Marriage and Despairing Feminists, Islam, Women and Feminism, NewAgeIslam.com

Islam, Women and Feminism
Of Law, Marriage and Despairing Feminists

By Flavia Agnes

18 June 2012

The recent Delhi HC judgment allowing a minor Muslim girl to marry her lover has caused much dissent. Flavia Agnes writes why a myopic perspective towards safeguarding a woman’s freedom won’t produce enduring results

A sense of doom and despair seems to be pervading among some women’s groups over the Delhi High Court judgment (Tahra Begum v State of Delhi Ravindra Bhat and S.P. Garg, JJ, 9th May, 2012 MANU-DE-2154-2012 ), which permitted a minor (almost 16-year-old) girl to marry the man of her choice rather than restore her to her parental authority. Some groups such as the Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan, that have been campaigning for codification of Muslim law, have used this occasion to campaign for 18 as the minimum age of marriage for Muslim girls (and 21 for boys), with the underlying presumption that all underage marriages must be declared as void.

Before we come up with a knee-jerk response to the hype created by the media and bite the bait, we need to have greater clarity on whose side are we (the feminists) batting in this confrontation between parental authority or the active agency expressed by a young, teenage girl. Also I wish to raise a connecting question—if the Muslim law was codified and minimum age for marriage was stipulated, as has been done under the Hindu Marriage Act, would the High Court have responded differently? Would the judges have sent the girl back to her parental custody? And the last question—could that have been construed as a “progressive ruling” by us claiming to be “feminists”?

http://newageislam.com/islam,-women-and-feminism/flavia-agnes/of-law,-marriage-and-despairing-feminists/d/7663


Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Murder as tradition: Baluchis defend burying five girls, women alive

Murder as tradition: Baluchis defend burying five girls, women alive

By D Suba Chandran

No one is quite sure when this barbarism took place, though it came to light after the Asian Human Rights Commission made an urgent appeal in mid-August. The five women -- including two married women and three unmarried teenagers -- were about to leave for Usta Mohammed in Jafarabad district. Since the three girls wanted to marry men of their choice, which was not approved by their elders, they had decided to get married in the civil court in Usta Mohammed. A group of six armed men abducted the women, fired at the three girls, and then buried them alive. When the two elder women, an aunt and a mother of the victims, protested, they were also buried alive.

http://newageislam.com/murder-as-tradition--baluchis-defend-burying-five-girls,-women-alive--/islam-and-human-rights/d/796