Pak court gives women victory but threatens rights
Women's rights activists, while hailing a court ruling that upheld
the validity of a 22-year-old Pakistani woman's marriage without
the consent of her guardian, are planning to appeal against the
judgement in the Supreme Court.
The judgement in the much-publicised 'Saima love marriage case',
as some newspapers here dubbed it, has among other things called
for changes in Pakistani laws to enforce parental authority and
discourage courtship.
''Women may have won the battle,'' said prominent lawyer Asma
Jahangir, ''but the war is not yet won.'' Jahangir was the counsel
of Saima Waheed, whose marriage last year was challenged by her
father who said he had not given permission.
Under Pakistani laws an adult Muslim woman does not need the permission
of her wali or guardian for marriage, but Saima's father
said the conservative Ahle Hadees sect he adheres to makes him
responsible for his daughter's marriage.
The Lahore high court last week ruled in favour of Saima, but
the judgement itself has upset women's rights activists. The Independent
Women's Action Forum plans to appeal in the Supreme Court against
what it says is ''legislating by judges''.
The three-member bench was also not unanimous in its decision.
''We are national judges and as such custodians of the morals
of the citizens,'' stated Justice Ihasanul Haq Choudhry in his
dissenting judgement.
His colleagues who upheld the validity of Saima's marriage have,
however, called for basic amendments to family laws to enforce
parental authority and discourage courtship, extra marital relationships
and ''secret'' friendships and marriages.
While Justice Khalilur Rehman has recommended that ''such relationships
and marriages be made a penal offence", Justice Ramday said
courts should hold in abeyance decisions on such matters till
laws are changed.
''Justice Ramday has... expressed views and made recommendations
which have added to the insecurity felt by Pakistani women, besides
putting the legislature in a spot,'' observed Jahangir, one of
Pakistan's best known human rights activists.
And Hina Jilani, who is also an advocate and rights campaigner
said Justice Ramday has ''legislated for an interim period although
he has no power to do so.''
Justice Ramday stated that until such time as the legislature
moves in the matter, the remedies that he has set down ''in the
larger public interest''' in paragraph 58 of the judgement shall
''lie before the family courts''.
Besides declaring that secret friendships and secret marriages
are forbidden in Islam, paragraph 58 denounces ''husband shopping'',
a ''scheme'', the judgement says, in which a young person ventures
out in search of a spouse.
The judge describes marriages arranged by family elders as the
ideal way to choose marriage partners. In Pakistan's segregated
society, they are the most common as young people seldom have
the opportunity to meet those of the opposite sex.
Justice Ramday has also stated that a child whose parents fail
to arrange his or her marriage, ''shall have a right to approach
the competent court'' to complain, and the court ''shall grant
a certificate to the effect whereafter no blame shall lie on such
a person if he or she gets married, of his or her own accord''.
His judgement also condemned inter-faith or other marriages based
on ''sheer momentary impulses which ... Are patently not in their
interest and which are also a cause for shame and disgrace to
the whole family.''
In such cases, he said, ''The aggrieved person shall have a right
to initiate proceedings in the competent court seeking annulment
of such a marriage.''
The court shall then have the power to annul a marriage if it
is satisfied ''that it shall be in the interest of all concerned''.
The aggrieved persons, says the ruling, refer to the parents or
in their absence, the brothers.
He also recommends that the legislature make extra-marital liaisons
a penal offence, although laws already exist which make sex outside
marriage a crime against the state, in the form of the controversial
hudood ordinances, which have consistently been misused,
mostly against women.
''He has brought in his own personal and moral judgement into
the ruling and one is left with the sickening sense that moral
and social norms will take the place of law. If courts judge on
morality, rather than on the basis of law, it will make justice
relative to an individual's point of view,'' said Jillani.
''If the judiciary, custodians and upholders of the law, begins
to give judgements based on personal moral opinions it will open
a Pandora's box that we can do without,'' she added.
Rights groups in the country are perturbed that the courts have
chosen to ignore precedents which have established the right of
adult Muslims to marry without the consent of guardians.
In a recent case in the Lahore high court, Justice S M Zubair
upheld the validity of the marriage of Najma Bibi with Mohammad
Tariq Mahmood, saying that since both were legally adults, and
had married of their own liking, they had committed no offence.
''Islam allows an adult Muslim woman to marry according to her
own choice,'' observed the judge. ''A wali, or guardian,
is bound by the will and consent of the woman, not the other way
around.''
Noting that society is undergoing major socio-economic changes,
the court held that it was the duty of jurists and superior courts
judges to give progressive interpretations to Islamic law provisions
in keeping with the spirit of law and the need of the times.
UNI
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