Violence against women and gender inequality are the
subjects
of frequent demonstrations in Rabat
|
The parliament of Morocco
has unanimously amended an article of the penal code that allowed rapists of
underage girls to avoid prosecution by marrying their victims.The move follows
intensive lobbying by activists for better protection of young rape victims.
The amendment has been welcomed by rights groups.
Article 475 of the penal
code generated unprecedented public criticism.
It was first proposed by
Morocco's Islamist-led government a year ago. But the issue came to public
prominence in 2012 when 16-year-old Amina Filali killed herself after being
forced to marry her rapist.
She accused Moustapha
Fellak, who at the time was about 25, of physical abuse after they married,
which he denies. After seven months of marriage, Ms Filali swallowed rat
poison.
Although women activists
are pleased about the amendment - and it shows the Islamist-led government is
slowly starting to listen to them - some say there is still much room for
improvement as the law does not necessarily protect women from violence or put
an emphasis on the seriousness of rape.
Rights groups say one in
four women in Morocco is a victim of violence. The most vulnerable live in the
countryside where only about 20% of women are literate and attitudes are more
conservative. In such areas, child marriages and forced marriages after rape
have been a common practice for centuries.
Women's rights groups now
want new laws to reflect the spirit of the 2011 constitution. World leaders
praised it, saying Morocco was a role model for democracy in the Arab world. It
states that men and women should be treated equally, yet also included Article
475.
The case shocked many
people in Morocco, received extensive media coverage and sparked protests in
the capital Rabat and other cities.
Article 475 provides for a
prison term of one to five years for anyone who "abducts or deceives"
a minor "without violence, threat or fraud, or attempts to do so."
But the second clause of
the article specifies that when the victim marries the perpetrator, "he
can no longer be prosecuted except by persons empowered to demand the annulment
of the marriage and then only after the annulment has been proclaimed".
This effectively prevents prosecutors from independently pursuing rape charges.
In conservative rural parts
of Morocco, an unmarried girl or woman who has lost her virginity - even
through rape - is considered to have dishonoured her family and no longer
suitable for marriage. Some families believe that marrying the rapist addresses
these problems.
While welcoming the move,
rights groups say that much still needs to be done to promote gender equality,
protect women and outlaw child marriage in the North African country.
"It's
a very important step. But it's not enough," Fatima Maghnaoui, who heads a
group supporting women victims of violence, told the AFP news agency.
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