WUNRN
Iran Parliament Has Delayed a Vote
on the Divisive "Family Support Bill."
Women's Rights Activists
Consider Delay a Victory.
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By
TEHRAN -- Iran's parliament has indefinitely delayed a vote
on a bill on families, a move women's rights activists say is a victory in
their drive to block legislation they fear would encourage polygamy.
The conservative-controlled assembly had been due to vote on
the government proposal known as the "Family Support Bill" August 31
but it was sent back to its legal committee for more work, an Iranian newspaper
reported this week.
Sussan Tahmasebi said she and other activists had lobbied
against the measure, which they said would allow a man in the Islamic Republic
to take a second wife without the agreement of his first wife. The bill also
covered other family issues.
But she cautioned that the bill, put forward last year by
the government of conservative President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, had not been
withdrawn and may be sent back to the legislature.
"It is a huge victory ... but the threat still looms
and it still exists," Tahmasebi told Reuters.
There was no immediate comment from the government, which
rejects allegations Iran is discriminating against women.
Under Iran's Islamic law, men can have up to four wives, but
polygamy is not widely practiced and is seen by many Iranians as unacceptable.
Women's rights activists seek an end to polygamy and last
month said in a statement the bill would reinforce women's lack of legal rights
in Iran.
"It in fact encourages polygamy by placing on men who
wish to take on additional wives the sole condition of financial capacity as
the deciding factor by the court," they said.
Too Controversial
The "Farhang-e Ashti" daily said September 1 that
the proposed law had caused controversy and was removed from parliament's
agenda.
"In view of the fact that the above-mentioned bill
needed more expert work ... it was felt as necessary to send it to the legal
and judicial committee," a member of parliament's presidium, Hamid Reza
Hajibaba'i, was quoted as saying.
The newspaper said Hajibaba'i expressed hope that the
committee would improve the draft law but did not give details.
Tahmasebi said activists also objected to other aspects of
the proposal, including imposing taxation on money the husband agrees in a
marriage contract to pay his wife upon her request.
She is involved in a campaign to collect one million
signatures in support of improving women's rights in Iran.
Campaigners say dozens of them have been detained since the
drive began in 2006, in what Western diplomats see as part of a wider clampdown
on dissent. Most were freed within days.
The activists say women in Iran face institutionalised
discrimination that makes them second-class citizens in divorce, inheritance,
child custody, and other aspects of life.
Iran's ruling clerics say Iranian women are protected from
the sex-symbol status they have in the West and that the country is
implementing divine law.
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