Wednesday, 17 July 2013

The Senate has alter Section of the constitution that stipulates that woman shall not be qualified for marriage until she attains the 18 years.



AfricCon Blogspot Media -  The Senate has resolved to alter Section 29 (a) of the constitution  that stipulates that woman shall not be qualified for marriage until she attains the 18 years.


And our dear Senate has okayed marriage for girls as young as 10. Or even younger. As long as your parents are willing to give you away.

According to ThisDay, yesterday, the Senate resolved to alter the part in our constitution that stipulates that a woman shall not be qualified for marriage until she attains the 18 years.

And this they did after Senator Ahmad Sani (Zamfara West), raised an alarm that stating a certain age for women before getting married, was against the Islamic law.

 The Senate also resolved to alter Section 29 (a) of the constitution that stipulates that a woman shall not be qualified for marriage until she attains the 18 years as they deleted age specification for women being married from the draft constitution and left the marriage age for women open.

While deleting the section from the draft constitution yesterday, the Senate claimed that a woman is deemed to be “full of age” once she is married irrespective of the age she did so.

The parliament, which had earlier retained this section by its voting, opted to alter it in submission to the alarm raised by Senator Ahmad Sani (Zamfara West), who claimed that the provision which stipulates a certain age for women before getting married, was at variance with Islamic law.

After a moment of controversy, Senate President David Mark asked his colleagues to vote afresh on the provision, a situation that eventually went in favour of Sani, who, thereafter, thanked the Senate president and his colleagues for supporting his cause. It is worthy of note that Sani had two years ago  married a 13-year-old Egyptian in violation of the constitutional provision