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Morocco: Quotas Overpowered By
Machismo
September 7, 2007 – (AllAfrica) When Morocco
held legislative polls a decade ago, just two women were elected
to the lower house of parliament in this North African country.
Legal reforms enacted since have ensured that women will fare better
when the latest parliamentary ballot gets underway Friday. But for
activists, there is still a long way to go in bringing gender parity
to the Chamber of Representatives.
In terms of a 2002 measure, women are assured of
30 places in the 325 seat chamber. These places are filled by candidates
from national lists, and the remaining 295 posts by aspirants on
local, constituency lists. Moroccan elections are held under a system
of proportional representation, which allocates seats to parties
according to the share of the vote that they win; legislative posts
go to candidates with the highest ranking on party lists.
However, women appear to have made few inroads
with local lists, observes Nadia Amrane, a young female voter who
supports the Socialist Union of Popular Forces, part of the ruling
coalition in the outgoing government.
The Democratic Society Party (Parti de la société
démocratique, PSD), a women's political grouping created
recently, is not putting forward a national list this to emphasise
that women's political participation should not be defined by quotas,
the party says. "It's a position of political principle,"
noted Zhor Chekkafi, secretary general of the PSD, which is in the
opposition.
In all, 33 parties are contesting the ballot. Just
under 6,700 candidates including several independents -- are said
to be vying for places in parliament.
"Political parties are in large part responsible
for the absence of women on the local lists of candidacies,"
Fatima Omari, an activist for the Progress and Socialism Party also
in the ruling coalition told IPS.
This comes despite efforts to have parties ensure
that women account for 30 percent of names on their lists, illustrating
how strongly traditional perceptions of male and female roles hold
sway in Morocco.
"I am for feminisation, but it's really difficult
to impose it in the presence of a dominant macho culture,"
Rachid Rahoul, an official in the Ministry of Culture, noted in
an interview with IPS.
In light of this, says Zahra el Harouch, a woman's
rights activist and candidate for the National Movement of Independents,
there needs to be a different approach to promoting gender equality.
"The meetings that we organise to sensitise
people to the potential of women, we must do this with men,"
she notes. "They should know that if they do not trust their
women, it's because they have a problem."
The opposition Justice and Development Party (Parti
pour la justice et le développement, PJD) a moderate Islamist
grouping, and apparently the party expected to perform best, Friday
has put forward 43 women candidates, 13.2 percent of its 325 aspirants.
"We greatly appreciate the female presence
in our ranks. Contrary to what our competitors think, we encourage
women to contest elections to defend our principles," Hadj
Omar, a PJD activist, told IPS.
Under-representation of women on party lists is
just one of the problems confronting the latest parliamentary ballot,
however. Reports indicate that there is also widespread apathy towards
the polls, stemming from the view that the considerable powers of
King Mohammed the Sixth make parliament largely irrelevant.
"The absence of a parliamentary tradition
in Morocco, as well as the long-standing concentration of powers
with the executive, has weakened the authority of political parties
The population's trust in political parties is low," says a
Jan. 24 briefing from Democracy Reporting International, a Berlin-based
non-profit that lobbies for democracy and citizens' participation
in political affairs.
In addition, the reputation of legislators can
be less than pristine. Noted Khadija Akelay, a doctor based in the
capital of Rabat: "The elections? I don't believe in them any
longer, because all the deputies become invisible after the result
of elections (is made known), and their sweet promises disappear."
She also holds out little hope that women legislators
could break this pattern. "I do not believe they will do better,"
Akelay told IPS. Amal Nadif, a pharmacist in Rabat, was not as pessimistic.
"I don't believe it's bad to give a chance to these women,
who seem convinced of their ability and their savoir faire in politics."
"If you speak of democracy, you must encourage
them and leave them to see what comes of it."Almost 11 percent
of seats in the outgoing lower house of parliament 35 posts were
held by women. Some 15.5 million voters are registered to vote Friday,
48 percent of them women, according to official figures. Polls for
the Chamber of Representatives are held every five years in Morocco.
From:http://allafrica.com/stories/200709070545.html
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