The parliamentary committee’s approval comes less than two weeks after 33-year-old Rula Yaaqub was beaten to death by her husband in northern Lebanon.
The killing of Yaaqub, mother of five girls, triggered an outpour of criticism by the media and civil society.
Lebanon is a country deemed more liberal than other Arab societies, but is still very patriarchal.
The bill has faced fierce resistance by Lebanon’s Muslim religious authorities, in a country where there is no unified civil law on personal status.
The draft was approved by cabinet in 2010, but in Lebanon’s parliamentary system it must be voted in by MPs.
Women’s rights groups welcomed Monday’s decision as a step forward, but said more needs to be done.
Titled “Draft law for the protection of women and all members of the family from domestic violence”, the text “does not specifically protect women’s rights,” said Faten Abou Chacra of the Kafa campaign.
“Most cases of abuse concern women, according to studies by local and international experts, so this category must be given specific protection,” said Abou Chacra, whose group’s name means Enough in Arabic, and which has campaigned since 2008.
The draft law, however, recognises the existence of marital rape, which has been a bone of contention pitting rights groups against the religious authorities.
But marital rape is not classed as a crime. The draft law deems it an offence.
Lebanon’s highest Sunni authority had previously slammed the idea of criminalising marital rape as “a Western heresy.”
The Shia Hezbollah movement, meanwhile, said the bill “interfered in the affairs of husband and wife.”
Fear of stigma and scandal are also to blame for silence on violence against women, activists say.
But thanks to lobbying efforts by civil society groups, parliament cancelled in 2011 the extenuating circumstances that had been used to give cover for honour crimes, or the killing of women who had “dishonoured” their families.
As in other Arab countries, few women dare to file complaints about harassment or domestic violence, as the police will usually just deride them and send them home.

Last updated on July 23, 2013 at 17:30
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