In Iraq, divorce rates soar even as stigma persists for women
4 min readBAGHDAD: Just a year into her marriage, Manal became one of the tens of thousands of Iraqis every year who divorce in a deeply conservative nation where break-up rates have risen.
For Manal, like many other women, the reason was clear â her husbandâs financial dependence on his familyâs business meant that âhe couldnât take any decisions of his ownâ.
The 33-year-old was divorced eight years ago from her ex-husband, who is also her cousin and who worked for his fatherâs appliance shop.

Not only did he depend on his family for money, but the couple also cohabited with her in-laws.
âHe wasnât financially independent, which caused family problems,â she said.
Her reasoning echoes that of tens of thousands of Iraqis, according to data published by the countryâs Supreme Judicial Council.
Iraqi authorities cite wider economic difficulties, early marriages and infidelity encouraged by new technologies as other key drivers of divorce rates.
More than 73,000 divorces were pronounced in 2021 by the courts in the country of 42 million people, largely the same as the number in 2018.
This is up from an average of just below 51,700 per year over the period 2004 to 2014, a decade that saw one in five marriages end in divorce, according to the councilâs website.
âItâs better to divorceâ
A study published by the Supreme Judicial Council on the causes of divorce cites âliving with the spouseâs family, leading in many cases to negative interference in the relationshipâ, in tandem with âthe spouseâs financial dependence on his familyâ.
It also cites difficulties finding employment and âinfidelities due to the internetâ.
Premature â often child â marriages are also a driver of divorce. A total of 4,092 adolescent girls were divorced in the two years to the end of 2021.
Veteran feminist Hanaa Edwar also pointed to âfinancial pressure on familiesâ as a cause.
âThis creates a psychological burden and problems,â she said.
And Iraq was not spared the surge in domestic violence that came with the coronavirus pandemic â though Edwar salutes women for increasingly finding the courage to leave.
âThere is an awareness among women that if violence persists in their lives and their childrenâs lives, then itâs better to divorce.â
But in a deeply patriarchal society like Iraq, a divorced man and a divorced woman are not equal.
On top of the often arduous battle to gain custody over their children, women are frequently exposed to âsexual harassmentâ by men who believe they have the right to make sexual advances towards divorced women, Edwar lamented.
Some families even refuse to allow divorced women to work or go out freely, for fear of the âstigmaâ and what people will say.
âAs for men â socially, everything is acceptable. Today, he divorces, tomorrow he remarries.â
âYou should waitâ
But statistics show that this has left many women undeterred.
âCourts have registered a rise in divorces, particularly over the past decade,â a magistrate was quoted as saying in 2019 on the judicial councilâs website.
A social worker who sifts through divorce cases filed in courts so as to try to re-establish common ground between couples likewise acknowledges that âdivorce has become much more common.â
Speaking on condition of anonymity at a Baghdad court, she said that âonly in 10 percent of cases are we able to find a solutionâ and abandon the divorce proceedings.
Manal now lives back in her parentsâ home and works for a feminist organisation. Her nine-year-old son Adam sees his father from time to time.
Despite the letdown of her first marriage, she has not written off the possibility of remarrying, but says conditions must be met.
A future husband would have to accept her son, for one, but also her professional ambitions.
Her advice to younger generations of women about to embark on their matrimonial journey is simple: âguarantee your economic independence and donât get married too young.
âYou should wait, marriage shouldnât be the sole ambition in life.â
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