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Iraqi Kurdish
Women Voice Hopes for Constitution
By Cyrille Cartier
April 26, 2006-(WOMENSENEWS)--In a bookcase in her Parliament office
in Irbil, Pakhshan Zangana is collecting hundreds of documents,
letters and lists of recommendations for the Iraqi Kurdistan constitution.
Civil society and women's organizations have sent
her their suggestions since the summer of 2005, when the drafting
process for the regional constitution began. Negotiations continue
as the Iraqi government--now emerging from a four-month deadlock
to select Jawad Maliki as prime minister--establishes itself in
Baghdad.
Under Iraq's constitution, the Kurdish regional
constitution will take precedence in any areas of disagreement but
it is widely expected that constitutional courts will have to iron
out the differences. The regional constitution is being debated
by a 20- member constitutional committee, but hasn't been reviewed
publicly. The national constitution was accepted in a national referendum
last October but remains unratified because of internal turmoil.
Once the government forms it will have four months to modify the
constitution.
Zangana, a member of the Communist Party and the
only woman on the constitutional committee, says one key difference
between the two documents is that the national constitution establishes
Islam as a basic source of legislation, while the regional draft
does not.
"There's nothing about that in the Kurdistan constitution,"
says the 59-year-old Zangana. The regional constitution, she says,
safeguards "the Islamic identity of the people of Kurdistan"
but refers to the religious freedoms of all other groups.
Zangana, however, is careful to add that the Kurdish
regional constitution is respectful of religious beliefs and traditional
society. "There is nothing that contradicts Islam," she
says.
Iraqi Kurdistan is composed of three northern governorates
that have been operating semi-autonomously since the Gulf War; they
exert considerable control over their security, borders, economy,
trade and law. When stability deteriorated in much of the rest of
the country after the 2003 U.S. invasion, the northern region bloomed.
It developed billion-dollar infrastructure projects, attracted foreign
business and upheld its reputation as the most stable and advanced
area in Iraq.
Against Rights and Democracy
Zangana says that using Islam as a legislative source
is "basically against women's rights and democracy."
Not all agree. Sabriya Ghafar Rahman is a founding member of the
women's organization of the Kurdistan Islamic Union, the third largest
political party in the region, which promotes an Islamic basis for
legislation. She says the idea that Islam is bad for women is based
on misinterpretations of Islamic law.
Advocates of women's equality "believe women
should go to work like men, that women should have political, financial
and social positions like men," says Rahman, who is also a
working mother. "I don't think this is a woman's duty."
Although she supports equality of opportunity between men and women,
she says she is afraid that secularism will go too far and that
women will neglect their duties as mothers and wives.
Mehabad Qeredaxi, advisor on equality issues in
the office of the Kurdish prime minister, Nicervan Barzani, takes
Zangana's view. "The current constitution of Iraq is flawed
against women's rights and it is based on religion and tradition,"
she says. "If we can enshrine the equality principal in the
constitution then we can prevent any violation against women's rights.
If we can't do that in the Iraqi constitution then we hope we will
be able to have it in the Kurdistan constitution."
Personal Status Law
The regional draft also deals differently with
the law that many say is most relevant to women: the personal status
law pertaining to divorce, marriage and inheritance. Article 39
of the national constitution says the personal status law should
be applied according to one's religion. This means, for example,
that Shiites--about 60 percent of Iraq's 27 million inhabitants--would
rely on one court system while the Chaldo- Assyrians--Christians
of several denominations who make up less than 2 percent of the
population--would use another. But the constitution does not explain
it in detail. In a society where sectarianism often transgresses
family makeup, Zangana says this is troubling.
"It would lead to the breakup of family and
of society where there are different laws that apply to different
people," says Zangana, referring to article 39. The drafting
committee for Iraqi Kurdistan, by contrast, is leaning toward having
one personal status law that can be applied to all regardless of
religion. They would work with a version of the law that existed
during Saddam Hussein's rule.
Despite her own secular position, Zangana takes
a moderate stance on the regional draft. Religion, she says, must
be incorporated in the regional constitution if it is to be accepted
by Parliament and the public."According to the tradition and
religion in our society, women are like the weak element,"
Zangana says. Customs and beliefs are, at best, apologetic and protective
of women. She is helping to change this, but she adds, "The
hardest thing in our struggle is the distance between our ambition
and the reality." "The role of the constitution and of
the activists is to prepare the society to accept these things gradually,"
she says.
Bill of Rights for Women
Chilura Hardi, head of the Khatuzeen Center for
Social Action, Women's NGO, presented the Kurdistan constitutional
committee with a Bill of Rights for Women in February. It was drafted
by about 70 participants, most of whom were women representing different
organizations and parts of the region. Some men also participated
and offered legal advice.
The document is partially based on the Rights of
Women in Africa adopted by the African Union in 2003 and the Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women
adopted in 1979 by the United Nations General Assembly."We
took all the things we wanted (from those documents) to express
them in a Kurdish way," making sure to eliminate the parts
about abortion and homosexuality that are not appropriate to the
society, says Hardi. While abortion and homosexuality are not illegal
in the region, they are subject to strong social and religious taboos.
The bill of rights bans female genital mutilation,
polygamy and the giving of women as brides to reconcile families
in conflict. Polygamy is not uncommon here and female genital mutilation
has been reported in the more rural areas of the region.
Representatives of Islamic parties have been excluded from the meetings
on the bill of rights. The manifesto has little chance of being
passed in Parliament and has served mainly as a vehicle for some
women to express themselves, one organizer said on condition of
anonymity.
"We knew they would be completely against what we are doing,"
the organizer said. "The one way to do it is to keep them out.
They'll have their say in the Parliament anyway."
From:
http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm?aid=2717
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