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Women’s Groups Seek Constitution
Delay
Iraqi women urge lawmakers to ensure their rights are protected
August 10, 2005 - (IWPR) Women’s rights activists
opposed to an Islamic-style government are lobbying for a postponement
of the August 15 deadline for drafting a new Iraqi constitution,
saying more public input is needed on the contentious question of
what role religion should play in politics.
Prominent women including Azhar al-Shaikhali, the women’s
affairs minister, and Iraq’s ambassador to Egypt, Safiyah
Suhail, are alarmed that some members from the Shia group which
dominates the National Assembly are pushing for Islam to be cited
as “the main source of legislation” in the constitution.
The women say the wording should instead say that Islam is “a
main source” of legislation, the principle currently in effect
in the Transitional Administrative Law.
Under Islamic law as commonly interpreted in Iraq, women are worth
only half as much as men in matters such as marriage, divorce, child
custody and inheritance. For example, when family members die, women
are eligible for only half the inheritance that their male relatives
receive, according to this legal tradition.
The women, who have won the support of former prime minister Ayad
Allawi, plan to write to Iraq’s political leaders as well
as the United States to ask for their support in ensuring that laws
passed in 1959 guaranteeing civil rights be maintained.
Suhail said they have chosen blue as their symbolic colour.
“Blue is the colour of heaven and water, which are the basic
sources of life - and women too are the basic source of life,”
said Suhail, whose group includes Hamid Majid Musa, the (male) head
of the Iraqi Communist Party, as well as female parliamentarians.
Under Saddam Hussein, Iraq was largely a secular society. But since
he was ousted, the country has become more religious and insurgents
have targeted women, particularly those who don’t wear a headscarf.
It remains unclear what the final constitution will say, but Suhail’s
group along with various politicians and more than 50 civil society
organisations have drafted a memo outlining principles that they
think should be included.
Among their demands are equal rights clauses that would outlaw discrimination
and guarantee rights for women.
The groups also want 40 per cent of government decision-makers to
be female. Currently, there is a National Assembly quota of 25 per
cent, but some lawmakers want a time limit on even this level to
be written into the constitution - something the activists of course
oppose.
Many of these issues were discussed last week during the National
Conference for Iraqi Women, sponsored by the women’s affairs
ministry.
One of the most contentious issues was the role of religion in the
state.
Faezah Baba-Khan, a Kurdish parliamentarian, said lawmakers should
look at the freedom enjoyed by women in Iraqi Kurdistan, which is
more secular than the rest of Iraq.
“It is important to have a constitution that separates religion
from political power,” she said.
Hanaa Edward, head of the al-Amal humanitarian organisation, said
that without progress on women’s issues there can be no democracy
in Iraq. She also criticised politicians who were trying to manipulate
the women’s agenda, saying, “there are some who are
trying to use us as an instrument of the ambitions of their sects,
which threatens to disunite Iraq”.
Amar al-Sharaa, a journalist from the independent Radio Dijla, was
pessimistic that the pressure would have any effect.
“Those women who are decision makers belong to some party
or bloc, while those who are independent won’t be given an
opportunity to have power,” he said. “Those who are
struggling for the rights of their daughters are regarded as outlaws.”
From: http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/irq/irq_136_1_eng.txt
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