Outrage over 'child marriage green light'

Turkey's religious affairs state agency came under heavy criticism on Thursday from the main opposition party after it reportedly said girls as young as nine could marry under Islamic law.
The Diyanet
religious affairs directorate said on Tuesday the minimum age for girls
to marry was nine, while for boys it was 12, according to Turkish media
including Hurriyet daily quoting the agency's official website.
The
post, which took the form of an explanatory statement on Islamic law,
has since been taken down, after a backlash from the opposition and
women's rights groups.
The head of the High Commission of Religious Affairs Ekrem Keles on Thursday told Hurriyet that the earliest age for a girl to marry is 17 and 18 for a boy.
"Forget a nine or a 10 year old child marrying, a child at 15 should not marry and should not be married," he said.
The legal age to get married in Turkey is 18.
But Turkish law says that in an extraordinary circumstance, a judge can give permission for a male and female aged 16 to marry.
The
controversy touched a nerve in Turkey, where child marriages are not
uncommon and the fight continues to raise girls' level of education.
Main
opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) lawmaker Gaye Usluer accused
the government of being "more interested in how to marry children at a
young age when there needs to be talk on children's education, health".
Meanwhile
CHP lawmaker Murat Bakan on Twitter said child marriages "violates
children's rights, women's rights and human rights", adding that the
party had called for a parliamentary investigation into child marriages.
Women's
rights groups also criticised the agency, which is similar to a
religious affairs ministry, accusing it of trying to legitimise child
abuse and urging Diyanet to "get their hands off our children".
The ministry said it had "never and will never approve early marriages" in a statement, saying it was only defining Islamic law.
"Forcing
girls to marry before psychological and biological maturity, and before
they obtain the responsibility to become a mother and form a family is
not compatible with Islam which says will and consent are conditions for
marriage," it added.
Women's groups as
well as Usluer raised concern over Diyanet's move coming after Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan approved a controversial law in November
allowing state-approved clerics to conduct marriage ceremonies.
"When
we said 'if you give muftis (clerics employed by Diyanet) the power to
conduct marriages, the issue of child brides will increase', this is
what we meant," she said, according to CHP's website.
Opponents
often claim that Erdogan and his Islamic-rooted Justice and Development
Party are attacking the republic's secular foundations, claims
dismissed by the government.
In 2016, the
government was forced to throw out a bill that could have pardoned men
convicted of child-sex assault after a public outcry.
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