Judges may consider smoking a factor in child custody cases

The Kingdom’s judges may now consider cigarette smoking a contentious issue in child custody cases. Cigarette smoking may now be treated like alcohol drinking, in deciding the outcome of custody cases, the Arabic daily, Al Eqtisadiya reported.
The court could side with nonsmoking parents, to protect the child from the negative impact of passive smoking, the newspaper reported. In July, a Saudi judge ruled that women suffering from second-hand smoke, as a result of their husbands’ smoking habits, could file for divorce.
“If a woman married a man and then found out that he is a smoker, and she mentioned in her court case that she is suffering from health problems related to the smoking habits of her husband, then their marriage should be ended,” Appeals Judge Ebrahim Khodairi said in an interview published in another Arabic-language newspaper, Al Watan.
However, Khodairi excluded the cases of women who were aware of their husband’s smoking habit, prior to signing their marriage contract.
Saudi Arabia is the fourth largest importer of cigarettes worldwide with an estimated 6 million smokers. There are about 600,000 female and 772,000 teenagers smokers in Saudi Arabia.
Other countries that have made smoking a factor in determining child custody include the United States of America, where courts in 18 US states have ruled that a parent’s cigarette smoking habit should be factor in the custody battle.