Women's rights activists coming under pressure |
DAMASCUS, 21 Mar 2006 (IRIN) - When Sabah’s husband left her in
Syria and returned to his native Saudi Arabia, he didn’t just leave his teenage
daughter without a father. He also left her without a nationality.
"The
problem in Syria is that a law that is more than 50 years old prevents a Syrian
woman from passing her nationality on to her children, while the man can do so
directly," said the 46-year-old mother, whose Saudi husband divorced her 12
years ago.
"It affects the children a lot. They are born here and they
study here but once they graduate from the university they start to face
difficulties,” she said. “Only Syrians have the right to work in the government.
Non-Syrians have to find a job in the private sector.”
In a country where
statistics show one in five young people struggling to find work, that loss of
potential employment is significant.
Worse still, say activists, efforts
to reform discriminatory Syrian laws are met with obstruction from a rising
conservative clerical establishment.
Women’s rights activists were
recently verbally attacked by clerics during Friday prayers at several mosques
across Damascus after they distributed questionnaires canvassing public opinion
on changing laws that they say unnecessarily restrict the rights of Syria’s
Muslim women.
"They accused us of being atheists, betrayers, infiltrators
and of violating religious rules,” said Nada al-Ali, a women’s rights
activist.
Women in Syria, according to activists, are by no means the
most restricted in the Arab world. They enjoy relatively high rates of
employment, political involvement and access to higher education. Fifteen
percent of Syria’s employers are female, while 12 percent of parliamentary seats
are held by women.
Yet they continue to face discrimination in the
personal sphere, particularly in matters relating to marriage and
divorce.
Foremost among these is the personal status law which governs
not only nationality, but also child custody after divorce and polygamy, and
which, conservative clerics claim, is founded on Islamic law, or
shari’a.
Abdelaziz al-Khatib, a conservative cleric at the al-Darwisheya
mosque in central Damascus who led the verbal attacks against the women’s rights
activists, said the activists were “imitating the West” in their demands for
reform. As the personal status law came from Islamic law it could not be debated
because “it came from the God who created all of us”, he said.
"We called
for the banning of the groups that were asking for changes to the law,” added
al-Khatib.
The public questioning of both the law and the status quo in
a country that has been controlled by what human rights groups say is a
security-orientated, authoritarian ruling party for over four decades is a rare
occurrence.
Syria is officially a secular state but has witnessed an
Islamic revival over the past few years, with an increasing number of women
wearing Islamic headscarves to cover their hair as a sign of religious
piety.
“The clerics said we have no right to ask people questions that
relate to the Quran,” said Nada al-Ali, whose activist group collected 15,000
signatures over the past few years from both men and women seeking to lobby the
government to introduce more equal custody rights for divorcees.
In
response, the government reformed the personal status law in 2003 to allow
divorced mothers four years’ extra custody of their children, up to the age of
15 for girls and 13 for boys, before the right automatically passes to a father.
“The extended custody was not enough and we were not very satisfied with it,"
noted al-Ali.
Under Syrian law a husband can divorce his wife simply by
telling her, “you are divorced," three times, while women seeking separation
must navigate a multitude of legal hurdles that usually take two years to
complete.
Syria’s personal status law, which is administered by Islamic
courts, was first issued in 1953 and reformed by the People’s Assembly – the
country’s legislature which is dominated by the ruling Ba’ath party - in 1975
and again in 2003.
In 2003, Syria ratified the UN Convention on the
Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women, with a number of
reservations.
These preclude the state from being legally obliged to observe
the equal rights of women in relation to provisions that are said to conflict
with Islamic law, including: the granting of a woman's nationality to her
children; freedom of movement and of residence; equal rights and
responsibilities during marriage and at its dissolution with regard to
guardianship; and the right to choose a family name.
Activists argue that
comprehensive reforms of both the personal status law and the criminal justice
system law are essential to safeguard women’s rights.
Though such cases
are greatly underreported, Da’ad Mousa, a prominent Damascus lawyer and women’s
rights advocate, said that more than 100 cases of so-called “honour killings”
were reported in Syrian newspapers between 2000 and 2003. The majority of the
men involved, who killed a female relative suspected of an illicit sexual affair
in the belief that the liaison tarnished the family’s “honour”, went
unpunished.
In September 2005, a young Druze bride was killed by her
brother because she had married a man from another religion. Her death triggered
a public outcry, including a campaign entitled “Stop Honour Killings,” which
lobbied Syria’s parliament and justice ministry to change the criminal law
code.
“Honour crimes contradict Islam,” noted Mohammad Habash, a leading
liberal MP and head of the Islamic Studies Centre in Damascus. Yet efforts to
see reform of Islamic laws meet with stern resistance, he added.
“We did
not expect the government's attitude to be so negative. There must be a clear
decision about whether we are with extremism or with enlightenment,” he
noted.
Badr Eddine Hassoun, Syria's Grand Mufti, who is appointed by the
Syrian president, added: "There are some Islamic leaders in Syria who refuse
dialogue. But they are the ones swimming against the tide.”
Despite the
sporadic campaigns and talk of legal reforms, Sabah, whose daughter is now
22-years-old, says little is changing. "In 2004, we sent a petition to the
parliament asking them to change the law, so that a mother could pass on her
nationality to her child,” she said. “But…the government delayed it for what
they said were ‘political reasons’.”
“It is really sad. I raised my
daughter alone and did everything to try and make her happy,” she
added.