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Iran bans magazine after 'white marriage' special | |
(about 1 month later) | |
Iran’s judiciary has banned a magazine for encouraging cohabitation, according to an Iranian newspaper. | |
Sex outside marriage is crime under Iran’s sharia-based laws, punishable by flogging. In cases of adultery, it can carry a sentence of death by stoning. | |
Last year, the magazine Zanan-e Emrouz (Today’s Women) published a special issue discussing various aspects of cohabitation, dubbed “white marriage” in Iran, and the reasons behind what it said was the increasing number of unmarried Iranian couples living together. | |
“The press watchdog banned Zanan-e Emrouz monthly today for encouraging and justifying ‘white marriage’,” the Shargh newspaper reported on Monday. | |
Last year, the office of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, ordered a clampdown on cohabitation.. | |
The youth affairs and sports ministry has blamed the media for fuelling interest in a practice the country’s hardline clerical rulers call an “ominous marriage” that shamefully flouts Islamic values. | |
Iranian law makes it more difficult for a woman to obtain a divorce than a man, which may be behind the cohabitation trend. Officials deny this discriminates against women, saying it is simply the application of sharia rules. | |
According to Iranian media, around 20% of marriages in Iran end in divorce, mainly because of economic hardship, adultery and drug addiction. | |
While disapproving of cohabitation, Iran allows the traditional Shia temporary marriage or “sigheh”, under which a couple can contract a marriage lasting anywhere from a few minutes to 99 years. | |
Iranian rights activists have criticised this option as sexist. |