marriage and divorce info

Upload: anandparera

Post on 09-Apr-2018

220 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    1/26

    Marriage Age:

    Africa

    Kenya: minimum 16 for statutory marriages under the Marriage Act.

    Senegal: minimum marriage age is 20 years for males and 16 for females; judicial

    discretion for permitting underage marriages for serious reasons.

    Tanzania: under Marriage Act 1971 minimum age is 18 for males and 15 for females;

    courts may permit underage marriage of parties who have reached 14 years of age if specific circumstances make marriage appear desirable; Penal Code provides that persons

    of "African or Asiatic descent" may marry or permit marriage of girl under 12 years of

    age in accordance with their custom or religion if marriage is not intended to be

    consummated before she attains 12 years.

    Sudan: puberty, with requirement for willing consent of both parties.

    Somalia: minimum marriage age is 18 years for both parties; female party may marry at16 with guardian s consent; Court may grant exemption from minimum age requirements

    in case of necessity.

    Ghana: governed by classical or customary law.

    Ethiopia: Civil Code sets minimum marriage age at 18 for males and 15 for females,

    regardless of whether marriage is civil, religious or customary; Family Law may have

    changed the age to 18 for both males and females.

    Middle East

    Egypt: 18 for males and 16 for females (lunar calendar).

    14

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    2/26

    Tunisia: minimum marriage age is 20 for males and 17 for females; scope for judicial

    discretion with wali s consent and for compelling reasons and apparent benefit for both

    parties; if wali withholds consent and parties are adamant, matter must be taken to courts.

    Iraq: minimum age is 18 for men and women; judicial permission may be granted at 15

    years if fitness, physical capacity and guardians consent (or unreasonable objections on

    part of guardian) are established.

    Morocco: minimum marriage age is 18 years for males and 15 for females; judicial

    discretion for males under 18 if there is fear of immorality; compatibility of age in

    marriage is defined as wifes right.

    Palestine: West Bank - 15 female, 16 male under the JLPS; Gaza Strip- LFR 1954

    required puberty and made 9 (female) and 12 (male) minimum ages; Palestinian Qadi al-

    Quda issued administrative decision in 1995 raising these to 15 female and 16 male. All

    ages by lunar years.

    Syria: minimum marriage age is 18 years for males and 17 for females; judicial

    discretion for males of 15 years and females of 13 years; judge may withhold permission

    for marriage if court finds incompatibility in age between betrothed parties.

    Jordan: 16 for males and 15 for females, lunar calendar; court permission required for

    females under 18 to marry men older by 20 years or more.

    Yemen: minimum marriage age is 15 for males and females.

    Kuwait: no substantive minimum marriage age identified; capacity to marry requires

    parties to be of age (puberty) and of sound mind, however, no notarisation or registration

    of marriage permitted where female has not reached 15 years or male 17 years.

    Algeria: 21 for males and 18 for females, scope for judicial discretion if necessity or

    benefit is established for marriage below that age.

    15

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    3/26

    Libya: minimum marriage age is 20 years for men and women; judicial discretion for

    marriages below that age on grounds of benefit or necessity and with wail s agreement.

    Asia:

    Indonesia: minimum marriage age 19 for males and 16 for females; provision for

    marriage below minimum age, subject to judicial discretion and parental consent.

    Malaysia: minimum marriage age of 18 for males and 16 for females, with provision for

    judicial permission for underage marriage.

    Singapore: minimum marriage age is 16 for both parties; kathi may permit marriage of

    girl under 16 who has attained puberty under certain circumstances.

    Brunei: minimum marriage age is 20 years for men and women; judicial discretion for

    marriages below that age on grounds of benefit or necessity and with wail s agreement.

    Philippines: minimum marriage age 15 years for males and puberty for females (female

    is presumed to have attained puberty at 15 years); Shari a District Court may authorise

    marriage of female between 12 and 15 years if she has attained puberty, upon petition of

    her wali ; khiyar al-bulugh : marriage of minors to be defined as betrothal and may beannulled by either party within 4 years of attaining puberty if marriage was not

    voluntarily consummated and neither father nor paternal grandfather served as wali ;

    penalty of imprisonment or fines or both for illegal solemnisation of marriage. 9

    Background and Sources:

    Amin, Middle East Legal Systems, Glasgow, 1985; Fluehr-Lobban, Islamic Law and

    Society in the Sudan, London, 1986; Hale, Gender Politics in Sudan: Islamism, Socialism

    16

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    4/26

    and the State, Oxford, 1996; Mahmood, "Sudan" in Statutes of Personal Law in Islamic

    Countries, 2nd ed., New Delhi, 1995; O'Fahey, The National Front, Its Opponents and the

    Sharia Issue, Islam et soci e ty s au sud du Sahara , n. 11 (Nov. 1997): 55-65; Pearl, A

    Textbook on Muslim Law, 2nd ed., London, 1987; Redden, "Sudan" in Modern Legal

    Systems Cyclopedia, vol. 6, Buffalo, NY, 1990; Rubin & Cotran, eds. Annual Survey of

    African Law, vols. I-VI (1967-1972), London; Safwat, "Islamic Laws in the Sudan," in

    Islamic Law: Social and Historical Contexts, al-Azmeh, ed., London, 1988; Safwat,

    "Sudan," Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law, vol. 1 (1994): 237-253; Women

    and the Law in Sudan: First and Second Reports, Women Living Under Muslim Laws,

    vols. I-III (1997) & vols. I-III (1999).

    Marriage Registration

    Africa:

    Kenya: statutory (includes Christian), customary, Muslim and Hindu marriages

    recognized as valid Polygamy: governed by classical law; a criminal offence to marry

    under civil regime (i.e. under terms of Marriage Act) and contract subsequent marriage

    under Islamic or customary law.

    Senegal: obligatory; if marriage contracted under one of customary legal regimes

    recognized in Senegalese law, parties must inform officer of civil status one month prior

    to marriage; non-registration is punishable by fine but does not determine validity.

    Tanzania: obligatory; non-registration punishable by fine although does not render

    marriage void; provision for licensing of religious functionaries as marriage registrars.

    Gambia: obligatory within one month of marriage (or divorce) although registration does

    not determine validity.

    Somalia: marriage to be registered at neared District Court or authorised office within 15

    days (40 days for residents of rural areas); failure to register punishable by fine; essential

    17

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    5/26

    elements of marriage outlined in Article 6 are: proposal and acceptance by contracting

    parties before two witnesses; marriage contracted under compulsion is invalid.

    Ghana: Marriage of Mohammedans Ordinance provides for registration of marriage and

    divorce among Muslims; marriage must be registered within one week.

    Ethiopia: Civil Code sets minimum marriage age at 18 for males and 15 for females,

    regardless of whether marriage is civil, religious or customary; Family Law may have

    changed the age to 18 for both males and females.

    Middle East

    Egypt: obligatory registration a legal requirement though it does not determine validityof marriage, thus judges shall not hear cases in which parties have not reached minimum

    marriage age or in which matrimony is denied and parties have no documentation.

    Tunisia: obligatory under Civil Status Act 1957, only formal document shall prove

    existence of marriage; unregistered marriage deemed void with three effects:

    establishment of paternity; immediate onset of idda from date of voidance declaration;

    and creation of prohibited degree on basis of affinity.

    Iraq: obligatory court registration.

    Morocco: obligatory.

    Palestine: West Bank- see under Jordan. Obligatory and penal sanctions in criminal law

    but failure to register does not invalidate the marriage; similarly in Gaza.

    Syria: obligatory; penal sanctions for failure to register .

    Jordan: penal sanctions for those in violation of the mandatory registration requirements

    for marriage and divorce.

    Yemen: husband and wali responsible for registration of marriage within one week of

    contract; penal sanctions for non-compliance.

    18

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    6/26

    Kuwait: no notarisation or registration of marriage contract permitted where girl has not

    reached 15 years or boy 17 at time of registration; no claim arising from marriage to be

    heard if parties are under-age at time of claim or if claim is not established by official

    documentation of marriage (except for paternity cases where decree of paternity shall be

    taken as decree of marriage).

    Algeria: obligatory registration governed by Civil Status Code; unregistered marriage

    may be validated by court judgment.

    Libya: obligatory.

    Asia:

    Indonesia: obligatory; Marriage Registrar Office of Department of Religious Affairs is

    responsible for registration of Muslim marriages and Civil Marriage Registrar Office of

    Department of Internal Affairs for all other marriages.

    Malaysia: required; both parties must apply to Registrar for permission to marry at least

    7 days before wedding; marriage not to be solemnised except in kariah masjid of

    woman s normal residence or special permission to marry elsewhere; Registrar records

    value of contents and value of items of dower given and promised at solemnisation;

    provision for appointment of Registrars in public offices and kariah masjid ; non-

    registration punishable by fine and/or imprisonment although it does not determine

    validity of marriage.

    Singapore: obligatory; all Muslim marriages must be registered with a kathi or naib

    kathi ; non-registration of marriage or divorce itself does not determine validity.

    Brunei: obligatory.

    Philippines: obligatory; penalty of fine for failure to register any change in civil status. 10

    Background and Sources:

    19

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    7/26

    Hooker, Islamic Law in South-East Asia, Singapore, 1984; Ibrahim, Family Law in

    Malaysia and Singapore, Singapore, 1984; Kamali, "Islamic Law in Malaysia: Issues and

    Developments," Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law, vol. 4 (1998): 158-179;

    Mahmood, Malaysia in Statutes of Personal Law in Islamic Countries, 2 nd ed. New Delhi,

    1995; Redden, Malaysia in Modern Legal Systems Cyclopedia, vol. 9, New York, 1990;

    Selangor, Administration of Islamic Law Enactment 1989 and Islamic Family Law

    Enactment 1984 (as at 15 th September 1991) , comp. by Legal Research Board, Kuala

    Lumpur, 1992; Siraj, Women and the Law: Significant Developments in Malaysia," Law

    and Society Review, vol. 28, no. 3 (1994): 561-581.

    Marriage Guardianship

    Senegal: each party must give free consent, even minors, and parties under 21 require

    parental consent; lacks of free consent or parental consent are grounds for nullification of

    marriage.

    Tanzania: Marriage Act 1971 provides that valid marriage requires free consent of

    marrying parties; guardian's consent not required for parties who have attained 18 years.

    Sudan: Guardian is to marry the adult woman with her consent, although the qadi is

    empowered to act in this capacity if her guardian refuses his consent without justification.

    Guardian retains entitlement to seek dissolution on grounds of lack of kifa'a of husband

    (defined as kifa'a in religion and morals.

    Somalia: girl who has reached 16 years, but is under 18 years may be represented in

    contract of marriage by father (in absence of father, guardians in order are: mother,

    grandfather, elder brother, uncle, Court-appointed guardian or judge); Court also

    empowered to overrule objection of guardian to marriage of female ward between 16 and

    18 years.

    20

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    8/26

    Ghana: Marriage of Mohammedans Ordinance specifies that marriage is solemnised in

    presence of bridegroom, bride s wali , and two witnesses; Criminal Code identifies

    causing someone to marry under duress as misdemeanour.

    Ethiopia: both Article 34 of Constitution and Civil Code state that consent to marriage

    obtained by violence renders marriage invalid, but Civil Code provides that consent

    granted due to "reverential fear" of an ascendant or other person is not equivalent to

    consent obtained by violence.

    Middle East

    Egypt: governed by Civil Code; wali cannot prevent ward from marrying for reasons of

    status, amount of dower, etc.; judge may authorise marriage if wali refuses.

    Tunisia: marriage of males or females below legal age of discernment requires wali s

    consent (or judicial decision overruling wali s refusal).

    Iraq: no relative or third party has power of compulsion; marriage contract concluded by

    coercion is void if not consummated; likewise, no relative or third party may prevent

    person having legal capacity from marrying; ILPS provides penalties of fines and/or

    imprisonment for non-compliance.

    Morocco: no coercive guardianship; ward may take matter to court if her guardian

    refuses consent to her marriage; ward who has reached age of legal majority and has no

    father may contract her own marriage.

    Palestine: West Bank- see under Jordan. and in practice consent of guardian registered in

    nearly every marriage; Gaza Strip- In Gaza the LFR assumes guardian gives consent and

    that where there is no guardian, the qadi exercises guardianship in marriage.

    Syria: under age of full capacity, both parties need permission of wali ; wail s objection

    to marriage of girl less than 17 years may be overruled by judge.

    21

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    9/26

    Jordan: guardian's consent is required for marriage of a female under 18 years, but not

    for a divorcee or widow over 18 years.

    Yemen: invalidity of marriage by coercion; judge can overrule guardian if his objection

    to marriage of ward is considered unjust, with proviso that the wife receive her proper

    dower from husband of equal status.

    Kuwait: marriage concluded by wail s offer and groom s acceptance; woman who has

    been married previously or has attained 25 years has "freedom of choice" in marriage,

    however, cannot conclude contract herself (must still be concluded by her wali );

    invalidity of marriage under coercion or intoxication.

    Algeria: guardian not permitted to marry his ward by compulsion or without her consent,

    and may not withhold consent if marriage is in ward s interests as judge is empowered to

    authorise such a marriage in case of guardian s opposition.

    Libya: guardian may not force ward of either sex into marriage or prevent ward from

    marrying; if guardian withholds consent, ward may take matter to court to obtain

    permission.

    Asia

    Indonesia: free consent of marrying parties required for validity, unless religious law

    governing the parties directs otherwise; Marriage Law 1974 defines as legal a marriage

    "solemnised according to the laws of the respective religions and beliefs of each of the

    parties"; parties under 21 years need parental permission.

    Malaysia: valid marriage requires both parties consent as well as consent of wali or

    syariah judge if no wali is available; compulsion of wards or unreasonable objection to

    their valid marriage punishable by fine and/or imprisonment.

    Singapore: wali of bride may solemnise marriage according to Muslim law or may

    request kathi to do so; kathi may serve as wali where woman has none or where kathi

    rules that wail s opposition to marriage is unreasonable; whether or not wail s agreement

    22

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    10/26

    is required for validity of marriage is governed according to classical school of law

    applicable to parties; in all cases, kathi is directed to make inquiry to determine that there

    are no lawful obstacles to marriage under either Muslim law or Administration of Muslim

    Law Act.

    Brunei: guardian may not force ward of either sex into marriage or prevent ward from

    marrying; if guardian withholds consent, ward may take matter to court to obtain

    permission.

    Philippines: free consent of marrying parties and presence and consent of wali are

    requisites for marriage contract. 11

    Background and Sources:

    Redden, "Jordan" in The Modern Legal Systems Cyclopedia, volume 5, Buffalo NY

    1990; Amin, "Jordan" in Middle East Legal Systems, Glasgow 1985; Mahmood, "Jordan"

    in Statutes of Personal Law in Islamic Countries, New Delhi 1995; Hinchcliffe and

    Alami, "Jordan" pages 79-114 in Islamic Marriage and Divorce Laws of the Arab World,

    London 1996; Welchman, "The Development of Islamic Family Law in the Legal System

    of Jordan," ICLQ 37 1988 868- 886; Gallagher, "Women's Human Rights on Trial in

    Jordan: The Triumph of Toujan al-Faisal," pages 209-231 and appended translation of

    article by Toujan al-Faisal, "They Insult Us... and We Elect Them!" pages 232-237, in

    Afkhami, Faith and Freedom, London 1995.

    23

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    11/26

    Judicial Divorce

    In many countries in the Islamic world, men have possessed a unilateral and

    unconditional right to divorce. In these same countries, women are often not only not

    afforded that right but, if they are allowed the right of divorce at all, must resort to the

    courts to divorce their spouses, where they confront innumerable social, legal, and

    bureaucratic obstacles. In many Islamic countries, women are often at a massive

    disadvantage compared to men in such matters as financial support, child custody, child

    visitation and child guardianship, and subsequent remarriage .

    Africa

    Kenya: governed by classical law Post-Divorce Maintenance/Financial.

    Senegal: either party may seek judicial dissolution on following grounds (preceded by

    reconciliation efforts by judge): other party s declared absence; adultery; sentencing for

    crime bringing dishonour to family; failure to fulfil legal condition stipulated upon

    marriage; abandonment of family or conjugal home; maltreatment rendering continuation

    of marital life impossible; medically established sterility; grave and incurable illness

    discovered since marriage; incompatibility making continuation of conjugal life

    intolerable; and for wife, failure to maintain on part of husband.

    24

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    12/26

    Tanzania: except in extreme cases, no petition of divorce to be heard before marriage

    has subsisted for two years; either spouse may apply for divorce on grounds of

    breakdown, but no decree of divorce can be granted unless court is convinced of

    irreparable breakdown; party seeking divorce must first apply to Marriage Conciliatory

    Board which must certify failure to reconcile parties before divorce suit can be initiated;

    evidence of breakdown of marriage for court's purposes must indicate following grounds:

    mental or physical cruelty; wilful neglect; desertion; voluntary separation; or change of

    religion dissolving marriage under religious law the parties were subject to at time of

    marriage; requirement of recourse to Marriage Conciliatory Board can be waived under

    certain circumstances (desertion, mental illness, imprisonment, etc.).

    Sudan: wife may seek judicial divorce on following grounds: husband's incurable physical or mental illness making it dangerous for the wife to continue to live with him;

    husband's impotence not curable within one year (established by medical report);

    husband's cruelty or discord between spouses; husband's inability to pay; husband's

    absence for one year or more or his being sentenced to two years or more in prison; also,

    divorce by ransom, i.e., if wife is declared nashiza (disobedient) by court order, wife may

    waive her rights and if the man does not agree to the divorce, arbitrators must be

    appointed; if she proves that she suffers from remaining with him a talaq will be ordered

    by the court.

    Somalia: either party may seek judicial dissolution on following grounds: incurable

    disease of other spouse making cohabitation dangerous or impossible; disappearance of

    other party for period of over four years; habitual failure to maintain by other party;

    serious disagreement between spouses making conjugal life impossible (after

    reconciliation efforts of 60 days); perpetual impotence or sterility of other party; and

    other spouse s sentencing to over four years imprisonment. Wife is entitled to seek

    dissolution if husband has been granted permission to marry polygamously by District

    Court, on condition that there are no children

    Ghana: possible to terminate customary law marriage by application to court under

    Matrimonial Causes Act, in which case grounds for divorce include those recognised in

    25

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    13/26

    personal law of the parties in addition to those enumerated in the Act; under Act, divorce

    may only be granted if court concludes irreparable breakdown; courts hearing suits for

    divorce among Muslims directed to apply Matrimonial Causes Act directing guidance by

    justice, equity and good conscience in determination of post-divorce reliefs and custody.

    Ethiopia: judicial divorce may be sought by either spouse for "serious causes" or "other

    causes"; serious causes are: adultery; desertion of marital home without knowledge of

    that parti e s whereabouts for two years; a spouse s confinement to lunatic asylum for

    minimum of two years; and judicial declaration of absence of a spouse; couples seeking

    divorce for either serious or other cause must first appoint family arbitrators who will

    attempt to effect reconciliation and if efforts fail, arbitrators can grant a divorce,

    preferably on mutually agreed terms; if serious cause for divorce can be established for which one spouse bears burden of fault, family arbitrators may divide common property

    unevenly; if no serious cause is established, property is divided unevenly to disadvantage

    of spouse who petitioned for divorce; arbitrators decisions can be appealed to courts;

    Family Law may have placed jurisdiction for divorce with the courts from the beginning

    of the proceedings.

    Middle East

    Egypt: wife may obtain judicial divorce on following grounds: serious or incurable

    defect of the husband (unless woman married in full knowledge of such defect or defect

    occurred after the contract and she implicitly/explicitly accepted it), harm making

    cohabitation as husband and wife impossible, if harm is proved and reconciliation efforts

    fail, material or moral harm if husband marries polygamously and such harm makes

    cohabitation as husband and wife impossible (up to one year from date of her knowledge

    of the polygamous union), husband s absence for a year or more without reasonable

    justification; husband s imprisonment for three years or more, after one year of sentence

    has passed, non-payment of maintenance; and discord if reconciliation efforts fail, with

    financial settlement proportionate to allocation of blame as determined by arbitrators;

    wife may also obtain a divorce on the grounds of incompatibility, but will not lose all

    26

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    14/26

    financial claims against her husband; a divorce requested by wife on the grounds of

    incompatibility must be granted within six months.

    Tunisia: available (after reconciliation efforts) at request of either party; in issuing

    decree of divorce, Court shall also assess maintenance, custody, housing and visiting

    rights.

    Iraq: wife entitled to request dissolution if husband does not fulfil any lawful condition

    stipulated in marriage contract; either party may request dissolution upon following

    grounds: such harm as makes continuation of marriage impossible; marital infidelity; if

    marriage was contracted without judicial permission before either party attained 18 years;

    if marriage was concluded outside court by coercion and was not consummated; if

    husband marries polygamously without judicial permission; and if any of above grounds

    are not proven, on grounds of discord (in which case courts initiate reconciliation

    procedures; if reconciliation efforts fail and husband refuses to pronounce talaq , courts

    may grant judicial divorce; if wife is found to be at fault, her financial rights are forfeit).?

    Wife may request judicial divorce upon following grounds: if husband is imprisoned for

    three or more years; if husband abandons wife for two or more years without lawful

    reason; if husband does not consummate marriage within two years of contract;

    husbands impotence or affliction (if after consummation, must be confirmed by medicalreport); husbands infertility if wife has no living son by him; husbands serious illness

    which would cause wife harm; non-maintenance after grace period of up to 60 days; non-

    maintenance due to husbands absence, disappearance, concealing his whereabouts, or

    imprisonment for more than one year; and if husband refuses to pay maintenance arrears

    after 60-day grace period; wife may also request judicial separation before consummation

    in return for any dower and proven expenditure on husbands part for purpose of the

    marriage.

    Morocco: wife may seek judicial divorce on following grounds: husbands non-

    maintenance; husbands grave and incurable or long-term defect; harm caused by

    husband making cohabitation impossible (after reconciliation efforts); husbands absence

    for over one year without valid reason; husbands oath of abstinence if he does not

    27

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    15/26

    comply with judicial decision allowing four month grace period; all judicial divorces

    irrevocable except divorce granted because of husbands oath of abstinence or inability to

    maintain.

    Palestine: West Bank- see under Jordan. Gaza Strip- the same, except that women may

    petition for divorce on the grounds of injury and does not allow the husband to petition

    on grounds of 'discord and strife'.

    Syria: wife may seek judicial divorce on following grounds: defect in the husband

    preventing consummation (though such right is forfeit if wife accepted defect except in

    cases of husband s impotence); husband s insanity; husband s absence without

    justification for one year; husband s sentencing to three years imprisonment after serving

    one year of sentence; and husband s non-maintenance, if non-maintenance is due to

    husband s inability, judge shall grant grace period of up to three months; either spouse

    may seek judicial divorce on grounds of discord causing such harm as makes

    cohabitation impossible (after reconciliation efforts).

    Jordan: grounds on which women may seek divorce include: failure to maintain,

    physical desertion or husband's absence for one year or more, husband's prison sentence

    of three years or more; both spouses may petition on grounds of 'discord and strife', breach of a binding stipulation of the marriage contract, and various grounds associated

    with spouse's mental and physical health.

    Yemen: dissolution available to either spouse on grounds of defect (right is forfeit if

    defect was accepted explicitly or implicitly, except for insanity, leprosy and other

    communicable diseases difficult to cure); and inequality of social status; annulment

    effected if husband becomes Muslim and wife is not kitabiyya or if wife becomes Muslim

    and husband refuses conversion to Islam or on grounds of either party s apostasy; wife

    may request decree of dissolution (lesser irrevocable) on following grounds: husband s

    non-maintenance; husband s absence or disappearance for one year if husband left no

    provision for maintenance or two years if he provided for wife s maintenance; husband s

    imprisonment for three years or more after one year of sentence; husband s breach of

    28

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    16/26

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    17/26

    Asia

    Indonesia: either spouse may seek judicial divorce (preceded by reconciliation efforts by

    judge) on following grounds: other spouse s adultery, alcoholism, addiction to narcotics,

    gambling or "any other vice that is difficult to cure"; abandonment for two years without

    valid reason; cruelty or mistreatment endangering life; physical disfigurement or malady

    preventing performance of marital duties; sentencing to prison term of five years or more;

    and constant disputes without hope of resolution.

    Malaysia: wife may apply for dissolution on following grounds: husband s

    disappearance for over one year; failure to maintain for three months; sentencing to three

    years or more in prison; failure to perform marital obligations for one year; continued

    impotence, if wife was unaware of it upon marriage; mental illness lasting two years or

    leprosy, vital go or communicable venereal disease; wife s repudiation of marriage

    concluded by father or grandfather before she attained 16, if she is below 18 years and

    marriage was unconsummated; cruel treatment; husband s refusal to consummate for

    four months; invalidity of her consent (obtained under duress, mistaken, etc.); and any

    other grounds for dissolution or nullification recognised in hukm shar.

    Singapore: wife may be granted judicial dissolution with husband s consent and Courtwill grant application; if husband agrees to a khul

    Court will assess amount of

    compensation to be paid by wife according to means and status of both parties; wife may

    also apply for faskh on following grounds: husband s failure to maintain for three

    months; imprisonment for three years or more; failure to perform marital obligations for

    one year; continued impotence since marriage; insanity or serious illness making

    cohabitation injurious to wife; and cruel treatment (defined as habitual physical abuse or

    cruelty of conduct, associating with women of ill-repute, obstruction of wife s religious

    observance, unequal treatment of co-wives, cohabiting with another woman, or trying to

    force wife to lead immoral life); before making decree of divorce or nullity, Court may

    appoint arbitrators to attempt reconciliation.

    30

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    18/26

    Brunei: judicial divorce available on following grounds: husband s failure or inability to

    maintain without cause; absence without justification; grounds of defect preventing

    fulfilment of aims of marriage or other grave defect; ila or hajr , after appropriate grace

    period; most of above grounds available to husband as well; if parties do not agree to

    talaq by mutual agreement, court will appoint arbitrators; if reconciliation efforts fail and

    harm is established, judge issues decree of divorce with financial effects proportionate to

    relative fault; annulment effected due to difference of religion in cases of conversion after

    marriage where this affects validity of marriage according to sharia.

    Philippines: wife may seek judicial divorce on following grounds: in cases of husband s

    oath of abstinence ( ila ), zihar (likening wife to his relations within the prohibited

    degrees), lian (imprecation of adultery); wife may seek decree of faskh on followinggrounds: husband s failure to maintain for six months; husband s sentencing to one years

    imprisonment; husband s impotence or abstention from conjugal relations for six months;

    husband s insanity or affliction with incurable disease injurious to family; husband s

    cruelty (defined in Code); and any other cause valid under Muslim law; until the passage

    of the Family Code, Muslims were the only Filipinos with the possibility of legally

    ending a marriage. 13

    Background and Sources:

    Hooker, Islamic Law in South-East Asia, Singapore, 1984; Ibrahim, Family Law in

    Malaysia and Singapore, Singapore, 1984; Kamali, "Islamic Law in Malaysia: Issues and

    Developments," Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law, vol. 4 (1998): 158-179;

    Mahmood, Malaysia in Statutes of Personal Law in Islamic Countries, 2 nd ed. New Delhi,

    1995; Redden, Malaysia in Modern Legal Systems Cyclopedia, vol. 9, New York, 1990;

    Selangor, Administration of Islamic Law Enactment 1989 and Islamic Family Law

    Enactment 1984 (as at 15 th September 1991) , comp. by Legal Research Board, Kuala

    Lumpur, 1992; Siraj, Women and the Law: Significant Developments in Malaysia," Law

    and Society Review, vol. 28, no. 3 (1994): 561-581.

    31

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    19/26

    Talaq

    Africa

    Kenya: governed by classical law.

    Senega l: extra-judicial divorce not permitted.

    Tanzania : does not automatically dissolve marriage, but constitutes compelling ground

    for Court to issue decree of divorce if talaq was pronounced after failure of reconciliation

    efforts by Marriage Conciliatory Board.

    Sudan: Regionally standard reforms affecting validity of talaq accompanied by a number

    in word or sign, talaq in the form of an oath, talaq phrased and intended to induce

    someone to do something. The wife must be informed of the husband's revocation of a

    revocable talaq during her ` idda period in order for the revocation to be valid.

    Somalia: Family Code provides that right of talaq belongs to husband "subject to the

    authorisation by the competent court"; court may authorise divorce only after

    reconciliation efforts (of 60 days) have failed, and court may not authorise more than one

    talaq at a time; divorce by a minor, insane person, or pronounced under compulsion isinvalid.

    Ghana: governed by classical or customary law.

    Ethiopia: abolished; under Civil Code, all divorce law is uniform regardless of whether

    marriage was civil, religious or customary.

    Middle East

    Egypt: talaq expressed indirectly, while intoxicated or under coercion, or conditionally

    with coercive intent is ineffective; repudiation to which a number is added verbally or by

    gesture effective only as single revocable talaq (except third of three); written and

    notarised certification of talaq must be obtained within 30 days of repudiation and notary

    32

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    20/26

    must forward copy of certificate to wife; certain financial effects of talaq suspended on

    her knowledge thereof if husband is found to have concealed it.

    Tunisia: extra-judicial divorce prohibited; irrevocable divorce becomes permanent

    impediment to remarriage between divorced spouses.

    Iraq: talaq must be confirmed by Shari?a Court?s judgement or registered with Court

    during ? idda period; talaq by man who is intoxicated, insane, feeble-minded, under

    coercion, enraged ( madhush ), or seriously ill or in death sickness ineffective, as is talaq

    that is not immediate or is conditional or in form of an oath; all talaqs deemed single

    revocable (except third of three); wife may obtain khul? From husband in return for

    consideration that may be more or less than her dower.

    Morocco : talaq must be registered at court, normally in presence of wife; if talaq is

    found to have been exercised while wife is menstruating, judge shall oblige husband to

    revoke it; talaq uttered while intoxicated, under coercion, enraged, upon condition, by

    oath or with intention to coerce not effective; talaq to which a number is attached

    effective as single revocable only (except third of three).

    Palestine: West Bank- see under Jordan. Gaza Strip-standard reforms to Hanafi rules as

    implemented in Egypt in 1920's, reducing effect of many forms of triple talaq to a single

    revocable and denying effect to others (eg those spoken as an oath). Extra-judicial talaq

    valid but registration is mandatory.

    Syria: talaq uttered while intoxicated, disoriented/enraged, under coercion, during death

    sickness or grave illness, or in order to coerce deemed ineffective; talaq to which number

    is attached shall be considered single irrevocable (except third of three).

    Jordan: talaq uttered while asleep, drunk, in a faint, overwhelmed ( madhush ), or under

    coercion have no effect; oaths on talaq and conditional talaq intended to coerce someone

    into committing or refraining from a particular act are invalid; talaq accompanied by a

    number in word or gesture, or repeated in a single session, gives rise to a single revocable

    repudiation.

    33

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    21/26

    Yemen: talaq ineffective if uttered while intoxicated or with intent to coerce; talaq to

    which number is attached only effective as single revocable (except third of three).

    Kuwait: talaq uttered by man who is insane, feeble, under coercion, intoxicated,

    mistaken, disoriented, or enraged shall not be effective; statement of talaq must be

    immediately effective; talaq to which a number is attached effective as single revocable

    only (except third of three); rules on khul include explicit prohibition of coercion in khul

    and invalidate any condition by father stipulating his custody over children from the

    marriage.

    Algeria: only established by judgement of the court; judgement must be preceded by

    reconciliation efforts by the judge; wife may obtain a khul in return for compensation (not

    to exceed proper dower) if husband consents.

    Libya: Article 28 states "[i]n all cases divorce shall not be established except by a decree

    by the relevant court" whether by talaq , mutual consent or judicial divorce; talaq uttered

    by a minor, insane, demented or coerced husband or without deliberate intent is invalid,

    as is suspended or conditional talaq ; talaq to which a number is attached considered

    single revocable (except third of three); wife may also obtain khul from husband for

    appropriate compensation, which may include deferred dower or custody over children; if husband retracts offer of khul "due to obstinacy" court is empowered to rule a khul in

    return for appropriate compensation.

    Asia

    Indonesia: Marriage Law provides that divorce shall be carried out only before Court of

    Law, after Court has endeavoured to reconcile the parties; husband married under Islamic

    law may submit letter notifying religious court of his intention to divorce and giving his

    reasons; if husband s reasons accord with any of six grounds for judicial divorce outlined

    in Marriage Law and determines that reconciliation is not possible, court will grant

    session in order to witness divorce.

    34

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    22/26

    Malaysia: extra-judicial repudiation punishable by fine and/or imprisonment, and courts

    adjudicate on validity of talaq on basis of classical Islamic law although original

    legislation is silent on the matter; husband wishing to pronounce talaq required to apply

    for judicial permission, outlining his reasons as well as amounts of payments of nafkah

    edah (idda period maintenance), mutaah (consolatory gift) and maskahwin (dower) he

    intends to make and provisions for division of harta sepencarian (matrimonial property);

    if court hearing determines consent of other party and irretrievability of breakdown, court

    advises husband s pronouncement of single talaq and registers divorce; if other party

    disagrees or court is not convinced of irretrievable breakdown, court begins conciliation

    efforts of no longer than six months; if conciliation committee fails to effect conciliation,

    issues certificate of its failure and any and recommendations regarding custody,

    maintenance, division of property, etc.

    Singapore: registration of divorce and revocation of divorce is compulsory, and non-

    compliance is punishable by fine; kathi may not register divorce without an inquiry

    establishing both parties consent; kathi may not register any divorce by triple talaq and

    case must be referred to Shari Court.

    Brunei: Article 28 states "[i]n all cases divorce shall not be established except by a

    decree by the relevant court" whether by talaq , mutual consent or judicial divorce; talaq

    uttered by a minor, insane, demented or coerced husband or without deliberate intent is

    invalid, as is suspended or conditional talaq ; talaq to which a number is attached

    considered single revocable (except third of three); wife may also obtain khul from

    husband for appropriate compensation, which may include deferred dower or custody

    over children; if husband retracts offer of khul "due to obstinacy" court is empowered to

    rule a khul in return for appropriate compensation.

    Phillipines: divorce may be effected by: talaq , ila , zihar , lian , khul , tafwid or faskh , as

    enumerated in Family Code; divorce by talaq must be effected by husband in single

    repudiation during wife s tuhr ; talaq to which any number is attached counts only as

    single revocable until expiry of idda. 14

    35

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    23/26

    Polygamy

    Muslim countries are addressing the issue of polygyny in different ways. One group of

    countries, including Tunisia, Turkey, and in part Lebanon, simply bans the practice

    outright. A second group restricts the practice, applying conditions that, in some cases,

    are quite rigorous to deter a frivolous exercise of multiple marriages.

    Africa

    Senegal: permitted; groom must register his option for monogamous, limited

    polygamous or polygamous (up to four wives) regime upon registration of first marriage,

    and option is for life; wives entitled to equal treatment in polygamous unions.

    Tanzania: permitted with consent of first wife; upon registration, parties are to declare

    whether marriage is polygamous, potentially polygamous, or monogamous, and marriage

    may be 'converted' to polygamous or monogamous by joint declaration

    Obedience/Maintenance: maintenance of wife or wives is husband's duty; becomes wife's

    duty in cases where husband is incapacitated and unable to earn a living; Courts may

    order maintenance under limited circumstances where husband refuses or neglects to

    maintain wife.

    Sudan: classical rules apply.

    Somalia: man may not contract second marriage without written permission of District

    Court; Court s authorisation requires ascertainment of one of following conditions:

    sterility of wife of which husband was not aware at time of marriage, attested by panel of

    doctors; incurable chronic or contagious illness of wife, certified by a doctor; wife s

    sentencing to more than two years in prison; wife s unjustified absence from matrimonial

    home for more than one year; or existence of social necessity (not defined).

    Ghana: governed by classical or customary law; all customary marriages potentially

    polygamous under Ghanaian law.

    Ethiopia: abolished, backed by sanctions provided in Penal Code.

    36

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    24/26

    Middle East

    Egypt: notification of existing and intended wives required; existing wife can petition for

    divorce if she sustains such harm as makes cohabitation as husband and wife impossible

    (up to one year from date of her knowledge of the polygamous marriage).

    Tunisia: prohibited; penal sanctions for polygamous husband and wife who knowingly

    enter into polygamous marriage are one years prison sentence and/or fine.

    Iraq: only permitted by judicial permission, to be granted on two conditions: financial

    ability and lawful benefit; permission not to be granted if judge fears unequal treatment

    of co-wives; ILPS provides penalties of imprisonment and/or fines for non-compliance.

    Morocco: polygamy not to be permitted in case of fear of unequal treatment; requirement

    of notification of prospective and existing wives; woman who did not insert stipulation

    limiting husbands right to marry polygamously in marriage contract and whose husband

    does so may seek judicial divorce on grounds of harm.

    Palestine: governed by classical law. Both laws specifically permit a woman to stipulate

    in contract that husband will not take another wife while married to her and to petition for

    divorce on the basis of this stipulation if he proceeds to break the terms of the stipulation.(Muslim Palestinians in East Jerusalem cannot marry polygamously under the terms of

    Israeli law).

    Syria: judge may refuse permission for polygamous marriage unless husband establishes

    lawful cause and financial capacity.

    Jordan: no constraints aside from classical injunctions that a man must treat all co-wives

    equitably and provide them with separate dwellings; man must declare his social status inmarriage contract.

    Yemen: permitted subject to equitable treatment of co-wives, financial means, lawful

    benefit, and notification of prospective co-wives.

    37

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    25/26

    Kuwait: governed by classical law; may be subject to stipulations in marriage contract.

    Algeria: reason for contracting polygamous marriage must be justified and prior

    notification of existing wife/wives required; any co-wife may petition for divorce on

    grounds of harm if her consent was not obtained.

    Libya: permitted with prior judicial permission based on grounds of financial and

    physical capacity; written agreement of wife may authorise husband to marry

    polygamously or authorisation may be given by court for certain reasons.

    Asia

    Indonesia: basis of marriage is considered monogamy, but Marriage Law does not prohibit polygamy for those religions that allow it (Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism);

    permitted with consent of existing wife or wives and judicial permission, by fulfilling

    conditions specified by law, i.e., proof of financial capacity, safeguards that husband will

    treat wives and children equally; and court inquiry into validity of reasons for wishing to

    contract polygamous marriage (e.g., existing wife s physical disfigurement, infertility,

    incurable disease).

    Malaysia: allowed with judicial permission; contingent upon application and court

    hearing with existing wife or wives; court requires proof of necessity (e.g., sterility

    physical infirmity, willful avoidance of restitution order, etc.), proof of financial capacity;

    guarantee of equitable treatment of co-wives; proof that proposed marriage will not lower

    standard of life of existing wife or wives and dependants; contravention of application

    and permission requirements punishable by requiring immediate payment of outstanding

    dower to existing wife or wives and by fine and/or imprisonment.

    Singapore: permitted, but marriage by a man who is already married must be solemnised

    by kathi or with Kathy s written permission.

    38

  • 8/8/2019 Marriage and Divorce Info

    26/26

    Brunei: permitted with prior judicial permission based on grounds of financial and

    physical capacity; written agreement of wife may authorise husband to marry

    polygamously or authorisation may be given by court for certain reasons.

    Phillipines: no Muslim man may take more than one wife "unless he can deal with them

    with equal companionship and just treatment as enjoined by Islamic law and only in

    exceptional cases"; determination of exceptional cases not specified.