The Age of Consent in Iraq, which was previously fixed at eighteen year old, can now be influenced by religious leaders accord the beliefs of their various Islamic 'sects'.
"Iraqi law currently sets 18 as the minimum age of marriage in most cases. However, the changes passed on Tuesday would let clerics rule according to their interpretation of Islamic law, which some interpret to allow marriage of girls in their early teens - or as young as nine under the Jaafari school of Islamic law followed by many shi-ite religious authorities in Iraq."
https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/u...-just-34533628
As if that's not bead enough, they're now planning pass a general amnesty law to release males previously convicted of breaking the under 18 law.
I realise it's a touchy subject but any religion that allows... in fact actively encourages... sexual abuse of children as young as nine is, IMO, reprehensible.
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22-01-2025 05:57 PM #1
Age of Consent in Iraq now decided by Religious Leaders
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22-01-2025 07:02 PM #2
I was watching a Muslim scholar talking about this the other day.
He said that whilst their scriptures give no defined answer on age of consent, Islamic law has generally been guided by societal norms. Obviously societal norms have changed down the years. It's generally accepted by religious scholars that Mary was about 15 in the Bible, likewise Juliet was 13-14 in a love story that is still learned in schools today (and indeed some countries have a 'Romeo and Juliet clause around consent). Even today in a relatively small area like Europe the age of consent varies quite a bit from 14 in Italy and Germany to 18 in Malta and Turkey.
I suppose the issue is how do you account for societal norms when religious law and civil law are inextricably linked or rather one and the same? When the religious laws draws from a text that had a Prophet who married a 7 year old? In Europe whilst some may find 14 young for consent it's hardly obscene; when there is scope to say it's 'normal' to have sex with 9 year olds based on the societal norm of 1500 years ago it becomes just a bit more complex.
The obvious answer is to keep religion and the law totally separate; I think most of us whatever our beliefs would get behind that even if our own morality is guided at times by religions. In Iran that isn't an option currently though and I don't really see a solution. It's abhorrent really probably needs a voice from within their own religious community to decry it.
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22-01-2025 08:53 PM #3This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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23-01-2025 02:18 PM #4This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote"Washing one's hands of the conflict between the powerful and the powerless means to side with the powerful, not to be neutral.' - Paulo Freire
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