ON Aug 29, I wrote an article discussing a case in which an
appeals court in Virginia decided that a Pakistani American woman had
not fulfilled all the requirements of divorce because her husband’s oral
pronunciation of divorce had not been registered with the local union
council/district registration office.
The woman’s first husband had divorced her verbally and sent her back
home to her parents. She believed herself divorced. When she remarried
she did not disclose the earlier marriage to her new husband and they
moved to the United States.
A few years later, she and her second husband also chose to divorce.
According to the court record, while on a visit to Pakistan the second
husband found out about the previous divorce. He now alleged to the
court in Virginia that since his wife had never registered the divorce,
she was still married to her first husband under Pakistani law.
He insisted that oral pronouncements of talaq or divorce had to be
registered with the local union council or district registration office
within 90 days. To prove his case, he provided the text of the Muslim
Family Law Ordinance, 1961.
The court in Virginia believed the man and his assertions regarding
Pakistani law and he was awarded an immediate annulment. On this basis,
he managed to sidestep divorce proceedings, thus avoiding the division
of marital property with his wife or any support etc that may have been
due to her under US law.
Pakistani law, the Virginia court stated, based on a literal reading
of the statute provided to them, was clear, saying in Section 7 that
“Any man who wishes to divorce his wife shall, as soon as may be after
the pronouncement of talaq in any form whatsoever, give the chairman a
notice in writing of his having done so, and shall supply a copy thereof
to the wife”. No notice means no divorce.
After the publication of the article I received many letters
regarding the issue of whether or not a notice to the council is
required for the endorsement of an oral pronunciation of talaq in
Pakistan. In several cases, wives were unsure of whether the lack of
registration was in itself a revocation of the oral pronunciation; in
other cases women and their families wondered how to effectively
register a divorce when the husband himself had failed to do so.
It seems the issue of notice as a requirement fell squarely, as it
were, on the fault line between what is required for the state to
adjudicate on marital disputes and the bare minimum required for
validating religious pronouncements in civil courts.
Unsurprisingly, much of the legal confusion dates back to the
Objectives Resolution that, appended to the constitution of Pakistan,
directs explicit conformity with the doctrine of the Quran and Sunnah
without explaining the consequences this would have in cases where form
and intent were not easily aligned.
In this case, the court in Virginia was simply wrong. According to Dr
Parvez Hassan, a legal scholar and practitioner who has worked on the
issue for several years, the issue of whether notice of an oral
pronouncement of divorce further requires registration with local
authorities is one that has long confounded as to the effects of the
registration requirements, their intent and implication on the rights
otherwise provided to men.
The conflict centres on those who argue that the registration
requirement can itself be considered a violation of Islam because it
adds an additional requirement (registration) that is not otherwise
necessary to the act of repudiating a marriage. Others insist that the
issue be judged on the basis of the ‘intent’ of the registration
requirement which would be to deter the treatment of divorce as a light
matter, maintaining the sanctity and seriousness of the marital
relationship.
The second position was upheld by the Pakistan Supreme Court in 1963
Nawaz Gardezi v Yousuf Ali where Section 7 and the registration
requirement of the Muslim Family Law Ordinance of 1961 was found to
enact a “machinery of conciliation whereby a husband wishing to divorce
his wife unilaterally may be enabled to think better of it, if the
mediation of others can resolve the differences between the spouses”.
Later courts changed their minds, and the intention of the
registration provision has since been brought into question by both the
Shariat Appellate Bench of the Pakistan Supreme Court and the Federal
Shariat Court. The latter pronounced in Allah Rakha v Federation of
Pakistan PLD 2000 that “subsection (3) and subsection (5) of Section 7
of the Muslim Family Laws Ordinance, 1961, are repugnant to the
injunctions of Islam”.
While that case is currently pending appeal by the Shariat Bench of
the Pakistan Supreme Court, the latter has followed the same track,
saying in Zahida Shaheen v The State (1994) that “failure to send a
notice to chairman of the local council does not render the divorce
ineffective”.
As it exists today, then, failure to register a verbal divorce with
the council does not invalidate the act. The confusion over the notice,
however, reveals a deep conflict between the intent of the law and the
acceptability of its sources.
Most religious clerics in Pakistan would agree that within Islam’s
legal and ethical constructions divorce is a matter to be taken
seriously and reconciliation between estranged spouses is a worthy aim.
Despite these assertions, though, their insistence against the validity
of the registration requirement of the Muslim Family Law Ordinance,
1961, and its attempt to position the state as a buffer between the
couple, stubbornly prioritise form over function, protecting the
marriage and family by making divorce more than an act of three
vocalised sentences.
The right of a man to divorce without any checks is thus deemed more
important than the state or society’s interest in ensuring the longevity
and stability of marriage.
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