|
LATIN AMERICA: Women Lawmakers
Find Strength in Unity
By Ángela Castellanos*
September 23, 2006 - (IPS) More and more women legislators in
Latin America are setting aside their differences and coming together
around the cause of women’s rights, in women’s caucuses.
The last to have done so are female congresswomen in Colombia and
Peru, who say they realised there is strength in unity.
Since July, when the Colombian legislature was sworn in and Dilian
Francisca Toro of Colombia’s Social National Unity Party (known
as the Party of the U) became speaker of Congress, Toro has been
leading efforts to get the country’s 26 female lawmakers to
work together.
The women’s caucus, which has emerged at a time of strong
political polarisation in Colombia, has brought together 12 senators
and 14 deputies from across the political spectrum, ranging from
progressive lawmaker Cecilia López Montaño, a former
government minister who has worked hard for the rights of women,
to Gina Parody of the party of right-wing President Álvaro
Uribe.
"They are working hard and with enthusiasm, and meet religiously
every Wednesday" with the aim of strengthening the representation
of women in Congress and promoting initiatives in favour of women,
Senate press relations officer Adriana Cabiedes told IPS.
Women hold 11.7 percent of the seats in the 102-member Senate and
8.4 percent of the seats in the 161-member Chamber of Representatives.
A bloc of women legislators has also been established for the first
time in Peru, with the support of the speaker of Congress, Mercedes
Cabanillas of the governing APRA Party.
The 35 congresswomen who took office on Jul. 28, accounting for
one-third of the current legislature, say they will push for laws
guaranteeing equal opportunities for Peruvian women at all socioeconomic
levels.
The women lawmakers belong to eight different political parties,
with the single largest group (12) coming from the alliance made
up of Union for Peru and the Peruvian Nationalist Party, which backed
nationalist anti-establishment candidate Ollanta Humala in the presidential
elections.
"This time, the women legislators who were elected have more
progressive views with regard to gender equity," Cabanillas,
who is serving her third term in Congress, told IPS.
"In the last Congress, there was a great deal of conservatism
that curbed progress on this issue, which cuts across all sectors
and requires a broad, unified effort."
The women’s caucus will debate equal opportunity initiatives,
in order for each congresswoman to promote the proposals in their
respective parliamentary commissions. "We don't want everything
to be channeled anymore only through the Women’s Commission,"
explained Cabanillas.
In the previous legislature, women held 21 seats. But they now
hold 35, making up 30 percent of the total -- the minimum set by
Peru’s quota law aimed at guaranteeing women’s representation
in Congress.
A similar law implemented in Brazil in 1996 stipulated that all
political parties were to reserve 20 percent of the places on their
lists of legislative candidates for women. The following year the
quota was expanded to 30 percent.
However, the law did not establish penalties for incompliance,
and very few parties actually live up to it. Women legislators in
Brazil are now pushing for public financing for election campaigns,
in order to guarantee that female candidates receive at least 30
percent of party campaign funds and radio and television coverage.
There are currently 51 women in the Brazilian Congress, who represent
10.7 percent of the Senate and 8.2 percent of the Chamber of Deputies.
The majority of the women lawmakers are leftists, with four female
senators and 16 deputies belonging to the governing Workers’
Party (PT).
Women legislators played a strong role in the constituent assembly
that rewrote the Brazilian constitution in 1988. With the aim of
incorporating the rights of women, the female lawmakers came together
in what some pejoratively referred to as "the lipstick caucus."
The women’s caucus tends to vote as a bloc, regardless of
the positions taken by their parties. But it is divided on questions
like abortion and same-sex civil unions, where religious and moral
beliefs take precedence, Almira Rodrigues, a researcher at the Feminist
Centre for Studies and Advisory Services (CFEMEA), a non-governmental
organisation that proposes to Congress initiatives of interest to
women, told IPS.
Besides voting together to push their initiatives through, Brazil’s
female lawmakers organise and take part in seminars, debates and
public events. This year they launched a major political offensive,
including public hearings around the country, to press for passage
of a bill on violence against women, which was signed into law in
August.
They also mobilised in support of a bill on budget guidelines,
which protects funding for social programmes and gender equality
initiatives.The women’s caucus has chalked up major accomplishments,
especially the quota law and the law against gender violence, said
Rodrigues.
A 2003 law providing for restriction orders in domestic violence
cases was also one of the biggest achievements of the women’s
caucus in Uruguay, along with legislation that gives all women the
right to take a day off work for their annual gynecological exam,
Uruguayan Senator Margarita Percovich commented to IPS.
The bicameral women’s caucus was formally created in Uruguay
in 1992, on the initiative not only of women belonging to political
parties but also women in academia and social movements, who had
already been working together during the years of transition to
democracy after the 1973-1985 military dictatorship.
Uruguay has four women senators and 11 female deputies, making
up 11 percent of the seats in Congress. "We have a common agenda,
which includes both draft laws and public policies, whose central
aim is gender equity," said Percovich.
Besides making progress with respect to political participation
by women through training courses organised jointly with female
city councilors, "the women’s caucus has made the issue
a question of public debate; there has been a change in culture,
and we are more visible in the media. But there is still a long
way to go, such as the terminology that is used," added the
senator, who belongs to the Vertiente Artiguista, a party that forms
part of the ruling leftist Broad Front coalition.
Women legislators have also begun to work together in Central America.
According to Deputy Irma Amaya of El Salvador, female lawmakers
from different factions "decided in August to set up a women’s
caucus in parliament to promote legislative initiatives that favour
Salvadoran women."
The group is made up of 13 women deputies, who account for 15 percent
of the country’s single-chamber legislature. Eight of the
women lawmakers belong to the leftist Farabundo Martí National
Liberation Front (FMLN), four belong to the right-wing Nationalist
Republican Alliance (ARENA), and one is from the Party of National
Conciliation (PCN).
In the 2006-2007 legislative budget, the women parliamentarians
obtained 25,000 dollars for training programmes on the rights of
women, gender issues and participation by women in politics.
They will also organise a forum for women in politics, aimed at
congresswomen, female public employees and party leaders, women’s
movement activists and other public figures. But it has not been
easy. Milena Calderón of ARENA says that when the creation
of a women’s forum was being discussed, "many men, from
every faction, walked out of the plenary session because they don't
care about the problems facing Salvadoran women. There are still
many things that they just don't understand."
* With additional reporting from Mario Osava (Brazil), Helda Martínez
(Colombia), Raúl Gutiérrez (El Salvador) and Milagros
Salazar (Peru).
From:
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=34852
|