Document #1244444
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
According to a source from the Argentine
Centre for the Research and Assistance of Women (26 Aug. 1991),
Argentine legislation treats adultery differently for men and
women. For men, the law recognizes adultery as a relationship in
which the man supports a woman other than his wife and has sexual
relations with her for a certain period of time. For a woman, a
single sexual encounter outside her marriage is considered adultery
(Ibid.).
The same source indicated that, regardless
of legal provisions, obtaining a divorce could be a lengthy process
that may require some two years of court procedures to demonstrate
that there is a valid cause for divorce. Only after this process is
completed the court may start actual divorce procedures
(Ibid.).
According to the Consulate of Argentina in
Montreal (26 Aug. 1991), adultery is a valid ground for requesting
a divorce before a court. One of the parties alone cannot request a
divorce unless there is a compelling cause such as adultery, sexual
impotence or family abandonment. For a divorce based on mutual
consent, both parties have to convince a judge that there are
strong reasons that make cohabitation impossible
(Ibid.).
An Argentine lawyer specialized in women's
issues in Argentina consulted by the IRBDC explained that divorce
can only be obtained by mutual accord before a judge, or by one
party if there are legally valid reasons for doing so (causales
de divorcio) (26 August 1991). Legally valid reasons that
enable a single party to request a divorce include adultery. The
source added, however, that a single party may file for divorce
after three years of living without the spouse.
The source also explained the other
possible way in which a single party may file for divorce: after
two years of living without the spouse, a person may request a
judge to declare legal separation. This legal separation does not
enable the person to marry again, but allows a separation of
property between the spouses (Ibid.). Two years after the
legal process has been completed and the judge has declared a legal
separation (dictado sentencia de separación), one of
the parties may file for divorce.
The same source explained that adultery is
considered a punishable crime (delito) under Argentine law.
However, the law discriminates against women, since a single sexual
encounter by a woman is considered adultery under the law. The law
defines adultery by a man as an extramarital affair that includes
financial support and sexual relations with a woman other than his
wife for a period of at least two months (Ibid.).
A case of adultery is seen by a Civil Court
if the purpose is to substantiate a claim for divorce, while a
Penal Court will see the case if the purpose is to impose a
sanction. In either case, the adultery has to be proven to the
court (Ibid.). Since these cases are often hard to prove and
are usually presented to Civil Courts only for divorce purposes,
cases of penal sanctions actually being imposed on men or women for
adultery have been extremely rare in the last 40 years
(Ibid.).
Further information on the subject could
not be found among the sources currently available to the
IRBDC.
Consulate of Argentina, Montreal. 26
August 1991. Telephone interview with staff member.
Argentine Centre for the Research and
Assistance of Women - ELIAM, Buenos Aires. 26 August 1991.
Telephone interview with representative.
Dr. Vain's law office, Buenos Aires. 26
August 1991. Telephone interview with lawyer.