<tt id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"></pre></pre></tt>
          <nav id="6hsgl"><th id="6hsgl"></th></nav>
          国产免费网站看v片元遮挡,一亚洲一区二区中文字幕,波多野结衣一区二区免费视频,天天色综网,久久综合给合久久狠狠狠,男人的天堂av一二三区,午夜福利看片在线观看,亚洲中文字幕在线无码一区二区
          WORLD> Middle East
          Iraq: $2,000 for Shiite-Sunni couples who marry
          (Agencies)
          Updated: 2009-08-06 06:51

          BAGHDAD: Muhanad Talib, a Sunni Muslim, married his Shiite bride because she was a "suitable woman" for him. It also didn't hurt that their vows made them eligible for a $2,000 payout from the government.

          Talib and his wife are among more than 1,700 newlywed couples who have accepted cash from a government program that encourages Sunnis and Shiites to tie the knot. The government has held 15 mass weddings for inter-sect couples from all over Iraq, with the most recent taking place last month at a club in western Baghdad once used by Saddam Hussein's army.

          While the Iraqi government doesn't track marriages bridging the two major Muslim sects, experts say mixed couples are on the rebound after a dramatic decline during the days of heavy violence. The rise, or rather, the return of mixed marriages appears to be one more sign that Iraqi society is gradually recovering from the war, and that things are more peaceful than they have been in years.

          Related readings:
          Iraq: $2,000 for Shiite-Sunni couples who marry Bomb strikes Shiite market in Baghdad, killing 69
          Iraq: $2,000 for Shiite-Sunni couples who marry Car bomb kills 35 in southern Shiite area in Iraq
          Iraq: $2,000 for Shiite-Sunni couples who marry Suicide bomber kills 9 Sunni militiamen in Iraq
          Iraq: $2,000 for Shiite-Sunni couples who marry Iraq seeks Sunni lawmaker suspected in attacks              
          Iraq: $2,000 for Shiite-Sunni couples who marry 
          Shiite bloc withholds its approval of US-Iraq pact

          As security has improved, Iraqis are returning to their homes in mixed neighborhoods and spending more time at offices, universities and other places where they meet their future spouses, said Shiite cleric Sayyid Ahmed Hirz al-Yasiri in Baghdad's Shiite stronghold of Sadr City.

          "There was a time when families were reluctant to consent to such marriages because of concerns created by certain conservative people from both sects," he said. "That is over now and things are getting back to normal, like they were before the fall of Baghdad. In the past two months, I married 40 to 50 Sunnis, including 20 mixed weddings."

          Other clerics echoed al-Yasiri's view.

          "My father is a cleric and a marriage official, and I know from him that such marriages are countless and on the rise," said Sheik Omar Abdul-Rahman Rashid, a preacher at al-Rahman Sunni mosque in Azamiyah in northern Baghdad. "Hatred has eventually faded with the passage of time."

          Talib, the new groom, smiled at his Shiite bride in the living room of a house the couple shares with relatives in Dora, a primarily Sunni area in south Baghdad.

          "I chose her and want to live the best part of my life with her," he said. "We do not discriminate between the two sects. ... This discrimination came from sectarian people."

          His wife, Samma Nasir, said shyly: "He has chosen me despite my being Shiite."

          Marriage in general is coming back into strong favor. Figures from Iraq's Higher Judicial Council show that 274,014 couples were married in 2007, when sectarian violence was raging. That jumped to 357,593 last year when violence waned. In the first three months of this year, 62,626 marriages were recorded across Iraq, excluding the semiautonomous Kurdish region in the north.

          Sheik Hamid al-Adhami, a Sunni cleric and marriage official, said he's marrying four to five couples a month, two or three of whom are mixed-sect. Two judges _ Ahmed al-Azzawi in the civil court in Baghdad's central commercial district of Karradah and Karim al-Ithawi in the appeals court in Baghdad's eastern Rusafa district _ both said that more people are getting married, and that mixed marriages are now as common as same-sect ones.

          The 14-century-old animosity between the sects grew out of a dispute over the succession of Prophet Muhammad, which split the Muslim world into Sunni and Shiite branches. Yet before the war, Sunnis and Shiites mixed freely in Baghdad. Inter-sect marriages were very common; religious identity was less important than allegiance to Saddam Hussein.

          In February 2006, a revered Shiite shrine in Samarra was bombed. Death squads slaughtered people and hundreds of thousands fled the increasingly segregated capital. The incident marked a new high in violence between the sects.

          A few months later, the Sunni vice president started a program doling out $2,000 to any Sunni-Shiite couple that tied the knot, in the hope that love would help overcome war.

          Hind Khalaf, an Iraqi women's activist, said mixed marriages never completely disappeared from society, but dropped off during the worst years of violence.

          "People were too afraid to lose their sons if they let them marry from the other sect," Khalaf said. "Things are gradually returning to normal."

          Violence between Shiites and Sunnis has dropped sharply, but the inter-sect marriage program is going strong. It's no small savings to get help footing the bill for expensive weddings in a nation where nearly one in four people live below the poverty line, defined as living on $2.50 or less per person a day, according to a study released in May by the Central Statistics Authority.

          To apply for the money, mixed couples write to Iraqi Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi's office with legal proof of their union. They are handed the cash in an envelope during a mass wedding celebration.

          Raad Karim, a Sunni university professor who just got married to a Shiite, received the money last month on a white stage adorned with purple fabric and flowers.

          "Iraq witnessed the marriage between Sunnis and Shiites for hundreds of years," said Karim. "We have to resume our Iraqi traditions even though terrorists are trying to erase them."

           

          主站蜘蛛池模板: 免费看久久妇女高潮a| 国产乱老熟女乱老熟女视频| 天堂va亚洲va欧美va国产| 丰满少妇被猛烈进出69影院| 9l精品人妻中文字幕色| 精品国产欧美一区二区三区在线 | 最新AV中文字幕无码专区| 欧美日韩久久中文字幕| 久久毛片少妇高潮| 亚洲精品色午夜无码专区日韩| 成人区人妻精品一区二蜜臀| 亚洲男人在线天堂| 熟女精品视频一区二区三区| 五月婷婷开心中文字幕| 暖暖免费观看电视在线高清| 夜夜影院未满十八勿进| 国产精品偷窥熟女精品视频| 国产精品三级中文字幕| 嫩草成人AV影院在线观看| 亚洲精品国产中文字幕| 日韩AV中文无码影院| 自拍偷拍一区二区三区四| 69精品在线观看| 国产特色一区二区三区视频| 毛片网站在线观看| 国产精品论一区二区三区| 高中女无套中出17p| 亚洲欧洲色图片网站| 精品人妻系列无码人妻漫画| 亚洲男人第一av天堂| 亚洲WWW永久成人网站| 国产AV一区二区精品凹凸| 99精品热在线在线观看视| 亚洲成人av在线高清| 国产精品久久久亚洲456| 精品尤物国产尤物在线看| 精品日韩av在线播放| 国内精品综合九九久久精品| 深夜福利啪啪片| 一色桃子中出欲求不满人妻| 午夜综合网|