KENYA: More Women in Parliament,
Hopefully - By Way of the Constitution
August 9, 2007 - (IPS) Kenya's parliament will
soon debate a constitutional amendment bill to improve female
representation in the legislature by creating 50 special seats
for women. At present, only some eight percent of parliamentary
posts in the East African country are occupied by women.
The bill is scheduled for discussion Aug. 14, to be adopted or
rejected in its entirety the same day. Over 2,000 women from across
Kenya will be present at parliament to lobby legislators to vote
for the bill.
An initiative to gather a million signatures in support of the
amendment is also underway: the '1,000,000 Signatures Campaign
for 50 Women's Seats in Parliament' was launched Aug. 7, and has
seen women activists and politicians march through the streets
of the capital, Nairobi, and surrounding areas.
The 50 slots will form part of 78 extra seats being added to
parliament, bringing the total number of posts to 300; the proposed
change also allows for an increase in the number of constituencies
from 210 to 250.
Women would be nominated to the 50 special seats, ensuring that
almost 17 percent of posts were in female hands at all times.
This proportion would rise according to the number of women who
won legislative seats (Kenya's next general election is slated
for December this year). At present, 12 posts in the 222-seat
legislature are filled with nominated persons, with no gender
restrictions on this quota.
"It has been a tough task negotiating and persuading our
male counterparts (concerning) the special seats, until we settled
for the 50," said Justice and Constitutional Affairs Minister
Martha Karua recently.
Certain male politicians have argued that the proposed amendment
amounts to discrimination against men. However, activists say
the bill simply seeks to correct the exclusion of women from parliamentary
representation that has resulted from outdated views of the role
they should play in society.
"This is a form of affirmative action…a short term
measure that can be employed to eradicate gross disparities even
in parliamentary representation," said Eddah Gachukia, who
helped convene the National Women Leaders Negotiating Committee
-- the body that has been leading consultations between women's
rights activists and politicians about the amendment.
A number of women's rights activists have also taken aim at the
suggested change. They say that the 17 percent of posts it guarantees
falls well short of the threshold needed for women to have a real
voice in the legislature; generally, this threshold is put at
30 percent of seats.
However, most see the amendment as a useful stepping stone. "Can
we pocket the 50 seats we have been offered first and then continue
with the struggle?" asked Gachukia.
The criteria according to which the seats are allocated may also
prove a bone of contention, with questions already being raised
over which women's groups and movements are more deserving.
At a recent meeting, women with disabilities demanded that they
be given special consideration in the nominations as did those
living with HIV/AIDS. Similarly, Maendeleo ya Wanawake ("Development
for Women", in Swahili) argued that since it was a nationwide
movement, it was entitled to more seats than smaller groups. Other
organisations are following suit.
In the face of these debates, Karua is emphasising that allocation
of seats is of secondary importance for the moment and that all
energies must go into having the bill passed: "Let us first
stick our neck inside. Once we are there, we can then start talking
of who gets what."
With just 18 women elected and nominated to parliament the highest
number ever Kenya has become the regional laggard concerning women's
legislative representation. Neighbouring Tanzania has achieved
a 30.4 percent representation, according to the Inter-Parliamentary
Union, and Uganda a 29.8 representation.
Rwanda, a little further afield, has women in 48.8 percent of
seats in the lower house of parliament, and in 34.6 percent of
posts in the upper house.
"The status of women in Kenya is not acceptable. The number
of women in parliament should not continue to be at a small percentage
when other, neighbouring countries have taken steps to rectify
the situation," said Elizabeth Lwanga, the United Nations
Resident Co-ordinator in Kenya, citing Rwanda and Uganda as countries
where affirmative action laws had been enacted to improve women's
representation in parliament.
In Rwanda, 30 percent of seats in the upper and lower houses
are constitutionally reserved for women. Uganda increased its
percentage of women legislators through creating special seats
for women, also guaranteed under the constitution.
Kenya first ventured down the road of affirmative action several
years ago, with a bill to this effect being tabled in parliament
in 2000. However, the law was opposed by then president Daniel
Arap Moi, and subsequently shelved.
Three years later, affirmative action measures were included
in a draft constitution intended to replace Kenya's independence
era constitution. The draft was rejected in a referendum held
in November 2005, putting affirmative action on the backburner
once again.
In the midst of efforts to provide women with more nominated
seats, parliamentary hopeful Joyce Majiwa says it is important
that women continue to participate and make gains in elective
politics.
"It is only elected members of parliament that can control
constituency resources, including the Constituency Development
Fund," she told IPS, in reference to one of the major financial
resources for improving living conditions in Kenya.
"Women must be part of overseeing development in constituencies.
This means they must be elected," added Majiwa, who is hoping
to win a seat in Karachuonyo, western Kenya.
From:http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=38843