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RESOLUTION 1325
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Iraq: Women want rights pledge
honoured
August 4, 2006- (Miami Herald) Iraqi women
plan to hold the prime minister to his promise to implement women's
rights reforms. Women in Iraq's parliament say they were heartened
by Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki's pledge in a speech before
the U.S. Congress last week to improve women's rights.
But they warn that women's rights have declined as the country's
security situation has worsened and the influence of fundamentalist
Islamists increases. ''We will, as women, make him responsible
for implementing what he has said,'' parliament member Maysoun
al Damalougi said of Maliki's speech.
In a once-secular state, many women now feel they must wear a
veil to appease conservatives. Others say they fear offending
Islamists' sensibilities by driving. Many say they are regularly
threatened for how they dress.
Earlier this month in Amariyah, a western Baghdad neighborhood,
residents found fliers warning women they would be killed if they
drive. A woman's body, her veil still on her head, was found in
the neighborhood a few days later. Residents believe she was killed
for driving. In another area, Dora, women said they have heard
threats that they shouldn't go to the market.
Thirty of the parliament's 275 members have signed a declaration
calling for legislators to clarify the rights of women, saying
female citizens are enduring ''humiliating practices.'' The legislation
was submitted in June but has yet to be voted on.
The declaration calls for the Ministry of Justice to investigate
complaints of inequality, for police officers to respect the rights
of women spelled out in the constitution, and for schools to no
longer force girls to wear veils.
''We are working so hard nowadays because we are in the process
of establishing a state, and this state should be built on respecting
each other's rights,'' said Shatha al Abousi, a member of Iraq's
parliament who signed the declaration.
The signers said this is not just about women's rights, but about
how much control religious leaders will have over their government.
''These attempts to intimidate women are attempts to terrorize
society,'' said Mithal Alusi, one of the 16 men who signed the
declaration.
Rafal al Khalidi, an engineer who works at an Iraqi ministry she
did not want to identify because she feared retaliation, said
she doesn't wear a veil and that she is often accosted by officials
inside her ministry about her decision.
''I am not against women who wear head scarves, but I am against
those who want to deprive women of their right to choose,'' Khalidi
said.
From: http://www.wluml.org
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