In a disturbing new development, it has been revealed that parliamentarians in Iran have passed a bill to protect the rights of children which includes a clause that allows a man to marry his adopted daughter and while she is as young as 13 years.
The
bill, which was approved on Sunday, caused a lot of Activists to
express alarm as the bill makes it possible for aretaker of a family to
marry his or her adopted child if a court rules it is in the interests
of the individual child
.
.
Iran's
Guardian Council, a body of clerics and jurists which vets all
parliamentary bills before the constitution and the Islamic law, has yet
to issue its verdict on the controversial legislation.
It
has been revealed that the girls in Iran can get married as young as
age 13 as long as they have the permission of their father while boys
can get married at 15
A girl under 13 can also get married but she would need the permission of a judge.
Shadi Sadr, a human rights lawyer with the London-based group Justice for Iran, has this to say
"This
bill is legalising paedophilia. It's not part of the Iranian culture to
marry your adopted child. Obviously incest exists in Iran more or less
as it happens in other countries across the world, but this bill is
legalising paedophilia and is endangering our children and normalising
this crime in our culture."
She
added: "You should not be able to marry your adopted children, full
stop. If a father marries his adopted daughter who is a minor and has
sex, that's rape."
According
to Sadr, officials in Iran have tried to play down the sexual part of
such marriages, saying it is in the bill to solve the issue of hijab
[head scarf] complications when a child is adopted.
An
adopted daughter is expected to wear the hijab in front of her father,
and a mother should wear it in front of her adopted son if he is old
enough, Sadr said.
"With
this bill, you can be a paedophile and get your bait in the pretext of
adopting children," Sadr said. Some experts believe the new bill is
contradictory to Islamic beliefs and would not pass the Guardian
Council.
Source: The Guardian
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