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MAURITANIA: Moves towards
political empowerment for women
April 1, 2008 - (IRIN) Mauritania is often held
up as a beacon when it comes to the proportion of women elected
to political office - a 20 percent minimum quota was instituted
in 2006 - but experts told IRIN once in power many women are still
sidelined from taking important political decisions.
“While the quota is a major step forward, changing the situation
of Mauritanian women is still a slow process because their colleagues
discourage them from leading on issues,” Aminettou Mint Ely,
head of the local non-governmental organisation (NGO) Association
of Women (AFCF), told IRIN.
“As a result, many of these women cannot fight to overturn
discriminatory laws in the country… such as those barring
working women from claiming a pension, or paying elected women less
than men for the same posts,” she said.
In the 2007 municipal council elections, women were voted into 37
percent of seats - or 1,120 out of 3,688 - and 18 percent of parliamentarians
are women, but women make up just three out of 27 ministers.
Even this marks progress - while Mauritania ranks 111 out of 128
countries on the World Economic Forum’s 2007 global gender
gap index, when it comes to political empowerment its ranking rises
to 74 partly because of its efforts to boost women’s presence
in government.
Starting point
Mahnaz Afkhami, president of the Women’s Learning Partnership
(WLP), thinks quotas are a good starting point. "Of the 13
countries globally with the highest proportion of women in government,
all have implemented quotas,” she told IRIN.
“But they are not the end-goal… Alongside them, we also
need to break down cultural stigmas and train these women to become
good leaders.”
Kadiata Malick Diallo, deputy in the National Assembly who has been
involved in Mauritanian political life for 30 years, said that while
the president may endorse the quota, not all male members of parliament
are on board.
By way of example, she told IRIN: “People often overlook women
when they choose members to form permanent standing committees.”
She continued: “Some [men still] think the quota is anti-democratic
and promotes mediocrity. But mediocrity is not the exclusive preserve
of women.”
Creating strong leaders
But for Hildegard Schoerry, good governance adviser with German
development agency GTZ, the problem also comes down to a skills
shortage. “In 2007 most elected women in municipal councils
were illiterate… as were many of the men.”
These women were not used to speaking out or making decisions publicly.
To address this, GTZ worked with the Secretariat of State for Women’s
Affairs (SECF), the WLP and local NGOs AFCF and Forum for Human
Rights Organisations (FONADH) in the southern regions of Hodh el
Gharbi and Guidimakha to build up women councillors’ leadership
skills.
They trained councillors in how to lobby for change, how to lead
a political decision-making process, how government works, and the
basic national and international laws concerning women.
As a result, “councillors’ behaviour is starting to
shift and they are starting to show determination in fighting for
their cause,” said Schoerry.
In both districts where the training has taken place, the 20 percent
quota has been surpassed.
Next steps
The next goal, for Diallo, is to see the quota extended beyond elected
office to other influential arenas such as the civil service and
the judiciary.
And when these quotas are reached, she hopes the goalposts will
shift again. “The 20 percent quota is a milestone, but our
ultimate goal is equality,” she told IRIN.
To change things on this scale they will need the endorsement of
powerful men across the political and religious spectrum, said Schoerry.
They have made some headway on that front - Muslim leaders have
already officially endorsed the quota by declaring the Koran does
not forbid women from taking political office.
But for WLP’s Afkhami, before they focus on expanding the
numbers, they need to make sure the leaders that are in place are
up to the job. The next step is to look beyond the numbers, to address
the quality of leadership these women adopt.
“We need to train these women to be democratic, principle-based
communicative leaders,” she told IRIN, “in order to
build what we want - an inclusive democratic process in Mauritania.”
From:http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77544
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