New Law Passed -- Adultery will have a 1 year Prison Sentence

by Rabbit 9 Replies latest social current

  • Rabbit
  • purplesofa
    purplesofa

    Well............thinking about my ex spending a year in jail after wagging his @#&^ all over town sounds kind of appealing.

    I want to know who presses charges?

    purps

  • purplesofa
    purplesofa


    WOW, I did not read the article........They are doing this to take care of a corrupt government.

    PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - Cambodia's parliament passed a law Friday which could send adulterers to jail for up to a year.

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    The vote prompted a walkout by opposition lawmakers who said the law carried echoes of the Khmer Rouge and the Taliban in a country which should be tackling poverty and corruption instead of legislating about morality.

    But the government argued the law would help reduce pervasive corruption by removing the temptation for officials to steal from state coffers to maintain mistresses as well as halting what it called a decline in morality.

    "This law is also aimed at reducing corruption, because when government officials have more women, they seek more financial sources to support their girls," National Assembly Chairman Heng Samrin said.

    Sam Rainsy, chief of his eponymous opposition party, was not impressed.

    "The government wants to distract the public from the important issues of poverty and the culture of impunity," he said of a country where 35 percent of the 14 million population live on less than $1 a day and the powerful rarely face justice.

    Many married Cambodian men keep mistresses if they can afford them and the government argued that making adultery a criminal offence would help shore up the family.

    Some wives resent the unfaithfulness of their husbands to the point of violence.

    In the last 7 years, at least 108 cases were reported of women being attacked by acid, some left horrendously scarred, usually by an outraged wife, the Licadho human rights group says.

    Few such cases made it to court, most being settled by compensation.

    The opposition argued that a law on adultery smacked too much of rigidly authoritarian regimes like the Khmer Rouge and the Taliban for a country still recovering from the Pol Pot years in which 1.7 million people were killed or died of overwork and starvation.

    "There are only a couple of countries in the world which prosecuted personal immorality based on their sacred texts such as the ousted Taliban regime," opposition MP Eng Chhay Eang said in the debate.

    "They forced people to follow their tradition which cannot be accepted. So did Pol Pot's regime. They murdered people who had love affairs," he added.

  • MidwichCuckoo
    MidwichCuckoo

    They'd have to build a LOT more jails.

  • Rabbit
    Rabbit

    It's scary to me that other countries are starting to give in to the pressure from fundamentalists of the Christian, Islam or any other persuasion. It's a slippery slope towards the Dark Ages rather than away from it.

    Adultery is probably wrong most of the time, but, it is certainly been a human characteristic for a long time. Since there can be MANY reasons why couples grow apart, fall out of love or just plain cheat...I think the couples involved can best decide any 'punishment' for infidelity.

    Divorce can be a prison sentence already, why...why...why would anyone want the govt. involved like this ?

    Rabbit

  • Broken Hearted
    Broken Hearted
    Believe it or not...a US congressman prposed a similar law just this year !

    Discuss...should govt. pass laws to punish adultery ? Why ? Why not ?

    Think there would be mahy of our congressman in jails then.

  • candidlynuts
    candidlynuts

    wow and the prisons are so overcrowded already..can you imagine if you stuck all the adulterers in there too?

  • wonderwoman
    wonderwoman

    just get it over with and chop their nuts off.

  • JWdaughter
    JWdaughter

    Hey, considering the laws in some countries--or what we know of ancient Israel, its pretty much a slap on the wrist. For the way this world is these days though, it seems a lot of judicial action and detention would be going on. I don't know that it would curb much adultery. . . child support costs more and it doesn't stop people from cheating w/o protection. Wouldn't matter cause it would never be enforced-look at the consequences in the military, and there is a segment of them that risk long term careers that they LOVE to cheat on their wives or (if single) with the wife of fellow-serviceman (big no no in military justice-and they WILL proscecute.)It is VERY common. If it would really solve a problem(and there are problems with adultery-it affects so many innocents) I would be fine with such a law-but it won't STOP anything, would cost a fortune to begin to enforce it and would just make lawyers richer.

    My opinion is subject to change at a moments notice.

  • Scully
    Scully

    The only way you can get rid of adultery is to outlaw marriage. No marriage = no adultery. Simple.

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