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IRAQ: U.S. LAWMAKERS SAY COUNCIL'S
PLAN CURBS WOMEN'S RIGHTS
By Jim Lobe
February 3, 2004 - (IPS/GIN) Iraq's
governing council has quietly approved a plan to replace some existing
legal rights of women with Islamic law or "Shariah", according
to 44 U.S. lawmakers, who warn Washington of a "brewing women's
right's crisis" in the U.S.-occupied country.
In a letter sent to President George W. Bush on Monday, the federal
politicians, led by Representatives Carolyn Maloney, Eddie Bernice
Johnson and Darlene Hooley, complain the move will reverse legal
guarantees for Iraqi women, who were among the most liberated in
the Arab world under Saddam Hussein.
"To prevent this order from taking effect, we strongly urge
you and your administration to take steps now to protect the rights
of Iraqi women," wrote the lawmakers, who represent both Bush's
Republican Party and the opposition Democrats.
The White House had no immediate comment.
The lawmakers were referring to IGC resolution 137, approved by
the 25-member body Dec. 29, which replaces Iraq's 1959 personal-status
legislation with religious laws to be administered by clerics from
the country's different religious faiths, depending on the sect
to which the parties in any dispute belonged.
That change could affect everything from the right to education,
employment and freedom of movement, to property inheritance, divorce
and child custody, according to the letter writers.
The resolution must still be approved by the de facto government
in Iraq, the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), headed by Ambassador
Jerry Bremer, in order to become legally binding.
In a letter to Bremer on Friday, MADRE, a New York-based international
rights advocate for women, argued that IGC's action lacked transparency
and was taken without any public debate or open consultation, with
only a minority of council members present.
"In less than 15 minutes of discussions, the IGC -- none of
whose members were elected by Iraqis -- passed Resolution 137, effectively
abolishing women's legal rights in 'liberated' Iraq," said
MADRE's associate director, Yifat Susskind.
"Under the direct authority of the Bush administration, the
IGC has privileged sectarianism over inclusiveness and violated
core principles of democratic governance."
Iraqi women, only three of whom serve on the IGC, are also protesting
the resolution, according to recent press reports.
"This will send us home and shut the door, just like what happened
to women in Afghanistan," Kurdish lawyer Amira Hassan Abdullah
told the 'Washington Post' last month. "The old law wasn't
perfect, but this one would make Iraq a jungle. Iraq women will
accept it over their dead bodies."
The IGC's action, according to various reports, came at the behest
of conservative Shiite members of the IGC when Abdul Aziz Hakim,
a Shiite who heads the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution
in Iraq (SCIRI), chaired the body. Secular and Kurdish members of
the council have since argued against the measure.
While the CPA is considered highly unlikely to ratify the change,
women's rights advocates are concerned that Muslim conservatives
could push it through the transitional government to which sovereignty
is supposed to be returned by the CPA no later than June 30.
Shia clerics are not only expected to increase their representation
in the government, but they might be supported by conservative Sunnis,
as well. Since the ouster of former president Saddam Hussein by
U.S.-led forces last April, religious conservatives in both Shia
and Sunni parts of Iraq are said to have become increasingly prominent
and influential.
"Although this law would not go into effect until after June
30, 2004 ... we will be unable to stop the implementation of these
types of harmful laws," said the lawmakers' letter to Bush.
"It is imperative that we act now to reverse this decision,
or the lives of Iraqi women will be worse because of America's actions.
We cannot allow that to happen."
The lawmakers said they were particularly angered by a column on
women's rights by Deputy Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz in Sunday's
'Washington Post'. Wolfowitz is currently in Baghdad reviewing the
military and political situation.
The column, 'Women in the New Iraq', argued, "women must have
an equal role and more women should be included in Iraqi governing
bodies and ministries", but failed to mention the growing controversy
over Resolution 137 or the threat to women's rights it poses.
"I would hope that Mr. Wolfowitz and this administration aren't
viewing this situation through rose-colored glasses," said
Maloney. "There is a women's rights crisis on the horizon,
and we must take action".
"As ruthless a place as Iraq was under its former dictatorship,
women did hold basic rights and were educated participants in society."
But in the post-war period, she went on, "women have been brutally
attacked and discouraged from participating in civic activities.
The governing council's rash move has started Iraqi women down a
dangerous slippery slope that ends in a human rights crisis. The
time to act is now or never."
"After making tremendous strides for equality and parity in
Iraqi society, the women there are now being
forced to fight yesterday's battle anew as some elements in their
society attempt to roll back the hands on the clock of progress,"
said Johnson.
"It would be utterly ironic if the women of Iraq were forced
to grapple with an age-old regime of oppression even more despotic
than the one we liberated them from during the war," she added.
The Bush administration had originally planned to oversee the writing
and ratification of a new constitution before handing sovereignty
back to an Iraqi government.
While U.S. lawyers are continuing to
work with the IGC on an interim charter that reportedly includes
equal rights for women and minorities, there is no guarantee the
principles enshrined in it will be incorporated in a new constitution.
The early draft of the interim charter calls for at least 40 percent
of the membership of any interim legislature and constitutional
convention to be women, but IGC officials have indicated that 20
percent is what will probably be agreed on.
In its letter, MADRE argued the resolution not only threatens women's
rights, but might also worsen growing sectarian tensions in Iraq.
The proposal, "would mean the introduction of separate provisions
and rules for each of the various sects in Iraq, and will thus threaten
the fabric of Iraqi civil society", it adds.
Zakia Ismael Hakki, a retired judge, told the Post the resolution
will "send Iraqi families back to the Middle Ages. It will
allow men to have four or five or six wives", she said. "It
will take away children from their mothers."
From: http://globalinfo.org/eng/promo.asp?Key=34408825573
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