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RESOLUTION 1325
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WOMEN GET FOUR MORE SEATS IN TRANSITIONAL
COUNCIL
May 19, 2003 (IRIN) The government of the
Central African Republic (CAR) has granted women's organisations
four more seats in the ruling National Transitional Council, government-run
Radio Centrafrique reported.
Speaking on Friday on the radio, government spokesman Zarambeaud
Assingambi also announced that the government had increased the
council's membership from 63 to 96, giving women's organisations
six seats, from an initial two.
When it becomes operational, the council will serve as legislative
body during a transitional period that CAR leader Francois Bozize
has said would last between 18 and 30 months, from March.
Assingambi said that artists, the "patriots" (those who
fought between October 2002 and March 2003 alongside Bozize), municipal
police, national minorities, associations of pupils and parents,
the diaspora and those who have retired were now represented in
the expanded council. The number of council delegates from political
parties was also increased from 12 to 15.
After his coup on 15 March, which ousted President Ange-Felix Patasse,
Bozize dissolved the national assembly and announced the creation
of the council on 23 April.
Besides being a legal advisory body comprising members from all
political, social and religious leanings, the council is mandated
to prepare for national dialogue that Patasse initiated in November
2002, draft a new constitution and prepare the country for elections
at the end of the transitional period.
The increase in the number of seats for women in the council follows
their complaints that they were underrepresented in the transitional
institutions that Bozize had established. The current 28-member
government has two women. Bozize promised to consider the request
for more seats in the council when he met officials of women's organisations
in mid-April.
Assingambi said that Bozize had asked all the organisations to choose
their delegates to the council, "to avoid a deadlock ".
So far, only the magistrates have nominated their two representatives
to the council.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200305190449.html
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