Interesting stuff: the UN Human Rights Commissioner has published a report on legal discrimination of women.
At least 53 UN member states do not legally sanction marital rape and related domestic violence against women. Without looking into the report, bloggers and newspaper commentators assume that nearly all of those states must be muslim.
Not so.
Among the worst offenders (both legally and in practice) are nations that are predominantly Christian (South Korea, Kenya, Ghana, DR Congo, Ecuador, Mozambique, Angola, Nicaragua, Haiti), Hindu (India, Nepal), ‘mixed’ (Lebanon, Tanzania, Nigeria, Malaysia) or ‘other’ (Madagascar).
The report also highlights legal loopholes. Many constitutions pay lipservice to gender equality, but nonetheless prioritize personal (religious) law over equality law.
Other issues are hidden in the legal small print, such as the minimum age for marriage. This is often much lower for girls than for boys, based on religious precepts or tradition. As a consequence, girls are married off at a young age which severely restricts their development and independence.
When it comes to ‘early marriage’ numbers, the authors quote a chart composed in 2005 by the International Planned Parenthood Federation. It shows that the worst practices are mostly in Africa, the poorest continent, and the very worst countries are also among the very poorest in the world, regardless of religion: Niger, Bangladesh, Nicaragua.
We can not ignore the anti-feminine bias in muslim tradition, but it appears that there are more ‘religions of peace’ than just Islam. When it comes to legal discrimination of women, poverty seems to be the major determinant. Followed by strong religious traditions as such, not restricted to one denomination or even to monotheism.
Whoda thunk, eh?![]()
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