|
Malaysian activists to study
polygamy
By SEAN YOONG
Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia - Opponents of polygamy in Muslim-majority Malaysia
said Thursday they will conduct a rare survey in an attempt to prove
the practice throws families into emotional and economic turmoil.
Researchers hope to interview 6,000
members of polygamous households over the next 10 months in what
could be the most comprehensive survey ever conducted on polygamy in
a Muslim society, said Zainah Anwar, director of Sisters In Islam, a
Malaysian women's rights group.
"We need evidence-based material to
strengthen our advocacy for awareness and reforms, rather than
merely use stories or assumptions about polygamy," Zainah said at a
news conference.
Islam allows a man to have up to
four wives. The practice of polygamy has sparked debate in Malaysia,
where nearly 60 percent of the nation's 26 million people are
Muslim, because activists say some polygamous husbands neglect their
responsibilities to wives and children.
According to government statistics,
there were about 13,500 polygamous marriages in Malaysia between
1995 and 2004, or about 1.4 percent of all Muslim marriages, said
Norani Othman, a sociologist at the National University of Malaysia.
However, anti-polygamy activists
believe the true number is higher because many men fail to report
their second or third marriages in order to keep them a secret from
their primary families.
Polygamy is illegal for Malaysia's
non-Muslim minorities, who are mainly Buddhists, Christians and
Hindus.
The new study is significant
because recent surveys on polygamy in other Muslim countries have
only included a small number of respondents and focused on legal
issues, not the financial and social impact of the practice, Norani
said.
Researchers plan to ask polygamous
families a wide range of questions, including how their expenditure
for clothes and other necessities is affected when the man marries
another wife, and whether existing wives and children are forced to
make financial sacrifices.
The survey will cover other
everyday dilemmas, including how husbands divide their time among
multiple wives, celebrate holidays and choose which wife to take to
social functions. It will also consider whether current laws
sufficiently safeguard wives from mistreatment.
Sisters in Islam is aiming to
publish its findings in early 2008. -- The
Associated Press
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|