New
inheritance law for Iranian women
Iran's
reformist Parliament has passed a bill granting women the same inheritance
rights as men, a move that sets the stage for a showdown with the conservative
12-member Guardian Council.
The proposed legislation
would equalise inheritance laws for widows and widowers. Under current
law, a woman with children can inherit one-eighth of her husband's money,
possessions and buildings. A woman without children can inherit one-fourth
of those goods, but she cannot inherit land in either case. The rest
of her husband's property goes to other relatives or, if they are not
alive, to the state.
Men, by contrast,
may inherit one-fourth of their wives' assets if they have children
and half if they do not.
Rights lawyers reportedly
voiced doubt, however, that the law would pass the Guardian Council,
an unelected panel dominated by Islamic hard-liners. The constitutional
watchdog has rejected several laws promoting equality between the sexes.
Last year it refused to ratify the Parliament's proposal to accede to
the U.N. Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women.
The council also
attempted to quash a law last November passed by Parliament granting
divorced Iranian mothers the right to custody of their sons up to age
7 (they already had the right to custody of their daughters up to that
age).
Source:
United Nations Foundations