India: Battle over India's marriage age
Source:
BBC A conservative Muslim body in India has gone to the High Court to challenge the legal age of marriage, which currently stands at 18.
The All-India Muslim Personal Law Board insists that in family matters the country's Muslims should be subject only to Islamic law, known as Sharia. It maintains that it is supported by a 1937 act upholding Muslims' right to be guided by this law. The debate has arisen because of a family who have been threatened with arrest because they allowed the marriage of an under-age girl. The family are insisting in the High Court that Muslims are entitled to follow Islamic Sharia law. They say this means allowing weddings any time after puberty, which comes earlier for most girls than boys.
Website Link:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/2238321.stm
Submitted on Sun, 09/08/2002 - 23:00
Related News
- “I Will Be Executed Before Fulfilling My Dreams”
- Report of Stoning Case in Somalia: A Mother of 8 Stoned to Death in the District of Saakow
- Senate body in Pakistan rejects amendment to child marriage act as ‘un-Islamic’
- FGM raises its ugly head in Sri Lanka with Kerala Support
- 'Islamic' Chair Cover Gets Iranian Activist In Trouble
Related Actions
- Joint Statement | To the Human Rights Council: Let’s Protect Women in Sudan
- LAWYERS-HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVISTS : SAVE NORA
- STATEMENT--Denounce, Protect, Act: Our Collective Duties against Rape and Sexual Assault in Senegal
- SUDAN: URGENT ACTION EIGHT GIRLS FREE, ONE OTHER RISKS FLOGGING
- Support KMEWO in demanding Justice for Dunya!
Relevant Resources
- Forced Gynecological Exams As Sexual Harassment and Human Rights Violation
- The Relationship between Feminism and State Policies for the Elimination of Violence against Women: The National Strategy for the Elimination of Violence against Women as an Example
- Recommendations for action against gender-related killing of women and girls
- Report of the Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences
- Addendum to the Report of the Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences