Hehehe.... bikin batas umur min 16 thn unt cewek dinikahi dan
ngelarang kekerasan thd cewek itu dianggap ngelanggar hukum syariat
Islam.

Ga salah memang, hukum syariat itu ga ngasih batas umur cewek unt
ngambil cewek sbg bini dan nyuruh ngegebukin cewek yg dianggap ga
patuh.

Islam dgn hukum syariat iblisnya itu emang agama yg benar, hehehe...

Teddy dan arra_s pasti mikir gua lg muji2 Islam. Tp knp mereka ga
komentar nuduh gua ngedukung syariat iblis? Pasti mereka sendiri jg
ngedukung syariat iblis, makanya krn "sependapat" dgn gua, mereka diam
aja.

Teddy udah kaing2 akan menggunakan tiap kesempatan unt nyerang gua,
kalo dia ga nentang syariat iblis, pasti dia akan menggunakan
kesempatan ini unt nyerang gua. Jadi pasti dia ngedukung syariat
iblis, sama spt gua, hehehe....



http://www.dw.de/kabul-debates-womens-law-violating-sharia/a-16658985

Women
Kabul debates women's law 'violating Sharia'

A draft law that would end violence against women is being debated in
the Afghan Parliament. But it is finding little support among MPs, who
feel that it violates traditional values.

It has been three years since Afghan President Hamid Karzai signed a
decree to end violence against women. The draft law, which is supposed
to allow women more freedom and protect them from violence, has yet to
be adopted in parliament. But courts can use it as a basis for their
work.

Opponents of the decree say it contradicts Sharia - the moral code and
religious law of Islam. Most of the proponents, however, are among the
68 women in parliament, for whom a quarter of the seats are reserved.
They are trying to reconcile a modern interpretation of Islam with the
law.

"They are all fundamentalists and extremists," Member of Parliament
(MP) Masooda Karochi told DW. "If a lunatic protests that this law is
against Sharia, then you can imagine what consequences it can have."
Sharia proponents make it impossible to have a constructive
discussion, she noted.


Controversy over the age of marriage

For supporters of Sharia law, physical abuse should not be considered
an act of violence against women, Masooda Karochi said. But because
physical abuse of women is the norm in Afghanistan, Karzai's decree
has allowed women to report incidences of domestic violence, leading
to the break up of several families.

In the draft, the legal age of marriage is 16 - another thorn in the
side of its opponents. Basing their argument on Islam, they say that
the beginning of puberty determines when a girl can be married. Also,
Sharia stipulates that fathers alone can make decisions on whom their
daughters marry and when.


Law provokes violence

The draft law is also provoking its opponents because it says that
women should be allowed to work. "Islam says that a woman cannot work
outside the house unless she has her husband's permission. It is the
responsibility of the man to fulfill all the needs of his wife," said
MP Sayed Hossain Alemi Balkhi. "If this is the case, then the man
certainly has the right to expect his wife to ask for his permission
before she leaves the house."


Balkhi believes that it is all propaganda - an effort by activists and
local media, who are trying to draw attention to violence against
women. And instead of trying to curb violence against women, they are
only fueling it, he said. "Let's say your husband beats you and you
leave for a women's shelter. You leave your home because your husband
beats you. Then you stay there waiting for him to come and take you
back."

The MP believes the law would not end abuse. "The husband would
definitely end up killing his wife the next time. Instead of curbing
violence, the law provokes it further." This view is widespread among
conservative MPs. And the arguments of the proponents of the draft
law, especially the female MPs, fall on deaf ears.

A symbolic law

Even if the draft law to end violence against women were to be passed,
it would hardly change their situation. Aziz Rafi, who heads the
Afghanistan Civil Society Forum, believes the battle is lost.

"Afghan law is very problematic and complicated. There is a lot of
corruption. We doubt that the law will help curb violence against
women," he told DW.

Afghan women are not pinning their hopes on this draft law. Their
continued support for it is more about sending a clear signal.


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