Morocco amends controversial rape marriage law
Violence against women and gender inequality in Morocco are the subjects of frequent demonstrations in the capital 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.
Parliament has voted unanimously to alter the controversial penal code article
She accused Moustapha Fellak, who at the time was about about
25, of physical abuse after they married, which he denies. After seven
months of marriage, Ms Filali swallowed rat poison.
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.