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AFGHANISTAN: Women election educators
at work in the provinces
July 21, 2005 - (IRIN) Female civic educators have
been dispatched to provincial areas of Afghanistan to promote awareness
of the forthcoming parliamentary elections among women, officials
at the Ministry of Women's Affairs (MoWA) announced on Thursday
in the capital, Kabul.
According to MoWA, the 10-day programme, which began
last week, involves 63 women meeting village leaders and approaching
the local media, mosques, NGOs and schools to help with the information
campaign.
We have to use all possible means to deliver election
information to women in rural areas where the majority of women
are illiterate, Nafisa Kohistani a MoWA public information officer
said. Cultural sensitivities and discrimination against women are
likely to discourage female involvement in the historic poll slated
for 18 September, observers say.
The teams will also encourage and identify women
who will voluntarily help election staff on voting day, Kohistani
said, adding that every team consists of three female educators
and aims to target at least 1,000 women per province.
Then, these targeted women will further convey the
election messages to fellow women in their communities, she said.
The voter education project is costing US $ 10,000
and is funded by the government of the Netherlands.
Up to 6,000 Afghans have registered to stand in
the legislature and provincial council elections. According to the
Joint Electoral Management Body (JEMB) of the 2,915 people who have
registered to stand for the 249 seat general assembly, 347 are women.
Afghan electoral law requires that at least 68 seats in the general
assembly be reserved for women.
Despite their second-class status in much of Afghanistan,
women appear committed to the country's democratic process. More
than 40 percent of the eight million who voted in last October's
presidential election were women.
Even so, it is a huge task to educate the entire
Afghan people about the electoral process, its significance and
how the whole process works.
It is more lack of information than security or
conservatism. Often women don't know why they should go to the polling
stations again after last October's presidential elections, Najiba
Maram, a local journalist and deputy director of the Voice of Afghan
Women radio station in Kabul, said.
MOWA's initiative follows a massive national civic
education campaign run by the JEMB. Since the beginning of May four
million posters, seven million pamphlets and one million stickers,
carrying information about the general assembly and provincial council
elections, have been distributed across the country. The JEMB has
also deployed nearly 2,000 civic educators to raise awareness of
the elections.
Of the 13 million eligible voters, our direct outreach
activities aim to target 6.9 million voters - over half the electorate,
Samantha Aucock, head of the JEMB public outreach programme, said.
Every medium has been utilised to deliver the election
message. As might be expected, these include the print media and
both private and state radio services. Slightly more novel has been
the use of Afghanistan's fledgling state television service and
even mobile theatre groups. These have been dispatched to rural
areas to stimulate understanding and interest in the election process
which is a novel experience for the vast majority of Afghans.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48233&SelectRegion=Asia&SelectCountry=AFGHANISTAN
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