|
Inter Press Service, July 21, 2004
ARAB WOMEN SAVOR PATCHES OF
POLITICAL PROGRESS
BEIRUT, Lebanon -- Amid spreading violence in
the Arab world, female Arab leaders last week
said democracy and a safe and civil global
society would only be possible when women have
attained more rights and freedom.
"It took people a long time to realize that
50 percent of the population is not represented;
therefore how can you have democracy?"
said Mahnaz Afkhami, an Iranian attendee at
the meeting, organized by the Beirut-based
Economic and Social Commission for Western
Asia. "The connection has finally been
made. The indispensable participation of women
is needed for society and the world to function
properly."
Nesrine Birwari, Iraq's minister of municipalities
and public works, agreed. "Women need
to be freed from the burden of backwardness
and illiteracy and protected from extremist
trends," she told the more than 400 Arab
female ministers, parliamentarians and nongovernmental
representative attending the Beirut conference.
The gathering is part of an ongoing series of
meetings among women in preparation for next
year's reckoning with the 10-year anniversary
of the Beijing Platform for Action, a United
Nation's document adopted in 1995 that promulgates
women's rights as human rights. It asks nations
and nongovernmental agencies to report periodically
to the U.N. on 12 key conditions affecting
women: poverty, education, health care, violence,
armed conflict, economic equality, human rights,
media treatment, management of natural resources
and discrimination against girls.
Latin American women met in Mexico City in late
June and summit planners are now gearing up
for related forums in Bangkok in September,
Ethiopia in November and Paris in December.
The big anniversary meeting--Beijing + 10--will
be held at U.N. headquarters in New York during
February and March.
Arab women at the meeting often found themselves
reporting significant gains, but within a still
extremely shaky framework. According to the
2002 Arab Human Development Report, for instance,
female education has improved faster in Arab
countries than in any other region. But that's
because there was so much room to improve.
Women's literacy still stands at a regional
average of 50 percent. Some of greatest turbulence
in the region concerns women's growing political
participation. In Afghanistan, for instance,
a group of female registration officials were
killed last month while attempting to register
female voters for the upcoming elections.
But while it was difficult for participants to
be celebratory against such a backdrop, they
were far from despairing.
"The road ahead is long and difficult,"
said Habiba Sarabi, Afghanistan's minister
of women affairs, who insisted that Afghan
women will be up to the political challenges
facing them. After all, she told Women's eNews,
"changing perceptions and norms of traditional
gender roles takes time."
Sarabi said that voter registration has been
taking place since early December and that,
of the 5.6 million voters so far registered,
38 percent are women. She reminded the gathering
that women's political participation in the
new government, the National Assembly, is guaranteed,
with at least 25 percent of the seats reserved
for women.
Iraq's Birwari reminded participants that 25
percent of the seats in the new Transitional
National Assembly, which is to be formed soon,
would go to women. She said that Iraqi women
now make up 46.7 percent of the work force
in ministries and six women hold ministerial
portfolios. "Thirty percent of director-generals
at ministries are women," she said.
Morocco's Secretary of State at the Minister
of Social Development Yasmina Badu said her
country, which has 30 seats out of 325 set
aside for women in parliament, "is advanced
in terms of its representation of women in
national assemblies."
She highlighted Morocco's passage earlier this
year of the Family Code law, which promotes
the principle of equality between men and women.
The code raised the legal age for marriage
to 18 from 15 for women (it was previously
18 for men only). It also brings divorce under
the supervision of the law and away from religious
authorities. That means that women can now
also institute a divorce, whereas before it
was left to the discretion of the husband only.
The code also modifies the conditions for polygamy
making it almost impossible; as a woman now
has the right to accept a marriage only if
her intended agrees not to take further wives.
Mervat Tallawy, the Egyptian former minister
of insurance and social affairs and now the
executive secretary of U.N. agency organizing
the conference, praised the Women's Movement
for Peace. The group was launched by Egyptian
First Lady Susanne Mubarak in 2002 and has
since brought together peace advocates, U.N.
agencies and representatives of international
organizations to reflect on and recommend concrete
actions that women can undertake to support
peace. Tallaway also hailed women's attainment
of voting rights in Bahrain and the United
Arab Emirates and the appointment of female
ministers in a number of Arab countries, including
six in Iraq and five in Algeria.
At the sidelines of the forum, Arab short films
on women were screened including a documentary
prepared by the sponsoring U.N. agency that
provided a historical perspective of women's
social movements across the Arab states. Books,
paintings and other artwork by Arab women covering
a range of political, social and cultural topics
were also on exhibit.
Beyond the formal statements and exhibits, many
participants emphasized how important it is
for women in traditionalist cultures to simply
meet and raise awareness of what remains to
be achieved for and by women in the Arab world.
"The most important part of these conferences
is the networking aspect," says Afkhami,
the Iranian-born activist who now lives in
exile in the United States. "There is
an extraordinary value in connecting people
together. Some may consider this a side benefit,
but to me it's a major one."
Bio: May Farah is a Beirut-based freelance
journalist who has lived in and covered the
Middle East (Western Asia) for 10 years.
(WomensEnews, a nonprofit independent news
service covering issues of concern to women,
is distributed with permission by Global Information
Network and available at www.womensEnews.org)
<< Inter Press Service -- 7/21/04 >>
FAIR USE NOTICE
This
site contains copyrighted material the
use of which has not always been specifically
authorized by the copyright owner. We
are making such material available in
our efforts to advance understanding of
environmental, political, human rights,
economic, democracy, scientific, and social
justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes
a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material
as provided for in section 107 of the
US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title
17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on
this site is distributed without profit
to those who have expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information
for research and educational purposes.
For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml.
If you wish to use copyrighted material
from this site for purposes of your own
that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain
permission from the copyright owner.
|