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JURIST Guest Columnist Mais Haddad, University of Pittsburgh School of Law, discusses laws in Arab countries that protect rapists and further oppress rape victims….

In the Arab world, women are under systematic discrimination socially, politically and economically. This discrimination is mirrored, deepened and embodied within the Arab countries’ legal systems. A quick study of these countries laws is enough to realize that male is the dominant gender and women fall at the bottom of the social hierarchy. Laws that deal with rape are one of many other examples on how women are treated as second class citizens. Even though rape’s punishment found in the Arab states criminal codes can be up to life imprisonment and death penalty. However, the problem lies not in the punishment of rape, rather in the burden of proof and the provision that a rapist shall not be prosecuted if he marries the victim. Consequently, these laws are further oppressive on women to come to light and report such crimes. Victims also face pressure and fear from their families and societies as the norms are to shame and stigmatize the victim of rape.


Criminal Codes of Iraq, Syria, Lebanon [Arabic] [pdf], Libya [Arabic] [pdf], Kuwait [Arabic] [pdf], Bahrain [pdf], Algeria [Arabic] [pdf], Tunisia [Arabic] [pdf] and the Palestinian Territories provide that if the offender of rape lawfully marries the victim, any action becomes void and any investigation or other procedure is discontinued and, if a sentence has already been passed in respect of such action, then the sentence will be repealed. A unique case is Saudi Arabia where Islamic Law is applied and there is no codified Penal Code and no clear definition of rape. Also, the criminal codes of Sudan and Mauritania have no definition of rape as a crime at all. Further, even though, this provision has been removed from the Criminal Code of Egypt since 1999, however, in practice this custom is still widely applied away from the court system. Morocco revoked the law in 2014 after a 16 year old girl committed suicide when she was forced to marry her rapist. Recently, Jordan succeeded quashing the law in 2017. As Jordan took steps towards abolishing Article 308, Lebanese activists were hanging wedding dresses along Beirut’s famous sea front, in protest against the Lebanese version of the law. Thus, Lebanon is on the same path with a lot of efforts and hope. Last month, Lebanon’s parliamentary committee for administration and justice announced a recommendation to repeal Article 522 of the country’s penal code, which allows for suspending the conviction of someone who has raped, kidnapped or committed statutory rape, if he marries the victim. The recommendation must now go through parliament, a process that could still take months.

The logic behind this law is to protect, though not the victim, rather the reputation of the victim in the society where she lives after her honor has been wounded. The honor of a woman is defined by her chastity, and when she is raped she is stigmatized and no longer marriageable. Hence, a marriage to her rapist is perceived as a solution to this problem and an exit from shame that is suitable to the society. This way her family needs not to feel dishonored or, in many cases, the need to seek vengeance-honor crime. Therefore, better than leaving girls shamed, unmarriageable and dishonored or to be killed by their families or relatives the law protects the girls by forcing attackers to marry them. As a result, such legal system legitimizes rape if it was followed by marriage, rewards the rapist and, in fact, allows him to continue his act. Also, the law ignores any redress for the victim, which should be the aim of the law at the first place. Further, it gets its legitimacy from the concept of shame, and prioritizes wrongful social customs over principles of protecting women and their right, as citizens and humans, to live safely with the protection of law and society.

Further judicial drawback to already troubling laws regarding rape is the burden of proof. For a rape conviction to actually be handed down, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Qatar and Mauritania laws mandate either a confession from the rapist or a witness account from four ãdül† males. One must pause here and imagine the circumstances of which a woman is being raped and four ãdül† male are witnessing this crime. In all cases, with neither of those things readily available, along with laws that make extramarital *** îllégâl, women reporting rape are likely to find themselves as the subject of criminal investigation and often, actually, sentenced. The result is the victims often don’t report rape, fearing they will be tried for adultery. In the UAEin many cases, foreign women who are in a tourism vacation in Dubai, not knowing of these laws ended up being arrested after they went to the police to report they had been raped. In Saudi Arabia a victim known as ‘Girl of Qatif‘ was gang-raped by seven men. At her 2006 Trial, she was sentenced to 90 lashes for being alone in a car with a man to whom she was not married. The rape was not established in the trial and it could not be proved. There were no witnesses and the men had recanted confessions they made during interrogation, and the verdict cannot be appealed.

Accordingly, the burden of proof in rape cases before the court and the provision of solving the problem of rape by marring the victim to her rapist among many other violations of women’s rights found in the Arab states’ legal systems, such as honor killing, child marriage and martial rape, reveal the level of cultural, social, political and legal failure these states have. A small success here and there of changing or revoking a certain articles and provisions is far away from what needs to be achieved. The amount of work to be done in order to revolutionize the way society and law perceives women and end the highest levels of female objectification are tremendous. Unfortunately, the Arab states do not seem to be on the right track at the first place. In fact, the recent unfortunate developments even show set back of what has been already little for women rights, especially with the ongoing instability and armed conflicts in the region and the clear rise of extremism over modernity.

Mais Haddad
MAY 9, 2017 11:20:12 PM

NOTE:
Prophet Muhammad was also a Rapist
(See: Bukhari Vol 3,Book46, No. 717) - Narrated Ibn Aun:
"Prophet had suddenly attacked Banu Mustaliq without warning while they were heedless and their cattle were being watered at the places of water.
Their fighting men were killed and their women and children were taken as captives; the Prophet got Juwairiya on that day and RAPED her."
 
ang batas ng mga middle eastern countries ay naka batay sa quran at hadith, yan ang masamang bunga kapag ang batas ng isang bansa binase sa religious books.

at maari mangyari din yan sa ibang parte ng europe lalo na sa germany at france kung saan lumalakas ang presensya at pwersa ng islam at, europe is in the brink of shariah law. kapag patuloy nilang pinag bigyan ang layaw ng muslim minority goodbye secularism and welcome prophet muhammad piss be upon him
 
The bible have a lot to say about rape as well...maybe u shud touch on that as well.

paps ang post ni ts ay batas tungkol sa kaso ng rape, ang mga christian countries ay secular goverment, wala ka makikitang christian country na theocratic system na kung saan ang mga fundamental laws and constitution nila ay binase o hinango nila sa bible.
tanging islam lamang ang meron ng batas na yan under shariah law
 
paps ang post ni ts ay batas tungkol sa kaso ng rape, ang mga christian countries ay secular goverment, wala ka makikitang christian country na theocratic system na kung saan ang mga fundamental laws and constitution nila ay binase o hinango nila sa bible.
tanging islam lamang ang meron ng batas na yan under shariah law
Yep..im aware...and buti na lang hindi nga... I told him to touch on the bible laws about rape since he specifically mentioned in his NOTE that the muslim prophet was also a rapist.
 
Yep..im aware...and buti na lang hindi nga... I told him to touch on the bible laws about rape since he specifically mentioned in his NOTE that the muslim prophet was also a rapist.

kulang pa nga yan, he is not just a rapist., he is ****pile who drilled 9 years old girl, a mass murderer who ordered the death of banu qurayza.

christians never practiced what bible preach, the arabs and muslim society is different, they practice, integrated in their laws what their prophet, their quran, their sunnah and hadith preach.

ive been in islam for many years,i studied and learned from a muslim cleric, kaya itong post ni ts, alam ko ito ay totoo at realidad sa mga muslim arab coutries.

and hindi lang iyan ang mapanlupig at malupit nilang mga batas na hinango sa quran at hadith, blasphemy law, death penalty for apostasy/leaving islam, theft is punishable by amputations of the hands, at kung ano ano pa kabalbalan na hinango sa religion nila.

maari may magsabi dito islamophobe ako, pero iyan ang totoo, iyan ang realidad ng arab nation, ng islam at ng kanilang shariah law na pinipilit ng muslim minority sa mga secular/democratic countries kung saan mga sampid, dayuhan at second class citizens lang sila.

hinahangaan ko ang nag post nito, dahil may guts at balls siya para i expose ang islam :ROFLMAO:
first time ako makakita dito ng anti islamic laws na post. good job
 
and
kulang pa nga yan, he is not just a rapist., he is ****pile who drilled 9 years old girl, a mass murderer who ordered the death of banu qurayza.

christians never practiced what bible preach, the arabs and muslim society is different, they practice, integrated in their laws what their prophet, their quran, their sunnah and hadith preach.

ive been in islam for many years,i studied and learned from a muslim cleric, kaya itong post ni ts, alam ko ito ay totoo at realidad sa mga muslim arab coutries.

and hindi lang iyan ang mapanlupig at malupit nilang mga batas na hinango sa quran at hadith, blasphemy law, death penalty for apostasy/leaving islam, theft is punishable by amputations of the hands, at kung ano ano pa kabalbalan na hinango sa religion nila.

maari may magsabi dito islamophobe ako, pero iyan ang totoo, iyan ang realidad ng arab nation, ng islam at ng kanilang shariah law na pinipilit ng muslim minority sa mga secular/democratic countries kung saan mga sampid, dayuhan at second class citizens lang sila.

hinahangaan ko ang nag post nito, dahil may guts at balls siya para i expose ang islam :ROFLMAO:
first time ako makakita dito ng anti islamic laws na post. good job
and i agree about the muslim laws that are still being used today are at the very core is inhumane. punishments are too harsh and some laws are oppressive to a certain group of people within their culture.

i just wanna clarify what u meant here when u said that "christians never practiced what bible preach".
in terms of what do u mean by that? about laws and punishments?
 
and

and i agree about the muslim laws that are still being used today are at the very core is inhumane. punishments are too harsh and some laws are oppressive to a certain group of people within their culture.

i just wanna clarify what u meant here when u said that "christians never practiced what bible preach".
in terms of what do u mean by that? about laws and punishments?

paps what i mean "christians never practiced what bible preach" is in the ground ans in term of their constitutions and laws, on christian countries.
and yes its about laws and punishment

bigyan kita ng isang example

JESUS AND THE WOMAN TAKEN IN ADULTERY JOHN 7:53–8:11

ang nasabing passages ay wala sa mga earliest manuscript ng bible, many bible scholars believe it was tampered or later addition.


Imagine mo kung i aaccept ng mga christian institutions ang katotohan na ang john 7:53–8:11 (which is mga bible scholars mismo ang nagpapatunay) ay later addition at kung ito ay iintegrate sa constitution and laws ng mga kristyanong bansa

ang magiging kaparusahan ng fornication and adultery ay stone to death tulad ng batas na pinatutupad sa mga islamic countries.

ang pagkakaiba ng christianity sa islam

ISLAM PRACTICE WHAT THEIR QURAN PREACH
AND WHAT THEIR PROPHET COMMANDED IN HIS HADITH AND SUNNAH
 
paps what i mean "christians never practiced what bible preach" is in the ground ans in term of their constitutions and laws, on christian countries.
and yes its about laws and punishment

bigyan kita ng isang example

JESUS AND THE WOMAN TAKEN IN ADULTERY JOHN 7:53–8:11

ang nasabing passages ay wala sa mga earliest manuscript ng bible, many bible scholars believe it was tampered or later addition.


Imagine mo kung i aaccept ng mga christian institutions ang katotohan na ang john 7:53–8:11 (which is mga bible scholars mismo ang nagpapatunay) ay later addition at kung ito ay iintegrate sa constitution and laws ng mga kristyanong bansa

ang magiging kaparusahan ng fornication and adultery ay stone to death tulad ng batas na pinatutupad sa mga islamic countries.

ang pagkakaiba ng christianity sa islam

ISLAM PRACTICE WHAT THEIR QURAN PREACH
AND WHAT THEIR PROPHET COMMANDED IN HIS HADITH AND SUNNAH
Yup.. i do get it.. and a lot of the bible laws are just as primitive as the muslim laws like your example and many other things...i just wanna clarify lang that to get to my point which is in terms of laws of our society when you say that "christians never practiced what bible preach" makes those particular christians more moral than their god...hats off to them. But the other edge of that statement is to deny what that same bible preaches which most christians cant or wont do. To say that "christians never practiced what bible preach" in terms of subject ni TS is a positive thing, but what does that say about their belief in their god?
 
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