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RESOLUTION 1325
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Iraqi women demand equality, end
to violence
March 8, 2008 (Middle East Times) Scores of women
rallied outside a Baghdad hotel on Saturday demanding an end to
violence and equal social status with men as part of the observations
of International Women's Day.
"Stop neglecting women. Stop killing women. Stop creating widows,"
read a large banner that the women, from various ethnic and religious
backgrounds, held at the Babylon Hotel in Baghdad's central Karada
neighbourhood.
After the rally, the protesters joined a much larger group that
included men and children at a hotel conference room to hear from
various speakers.
One of the speakers was Nariman Mahmoud Othman, minister for women's
rights, who led a delegation of women to the office of the head
of Iraq's parliament, Mahmoud Mashhadani, with a list of issues
concerning women's rights they wanted to discuss.
The list also called for more women to be appointed to positions
of power, including ministries and embassies.
Another speaker was Maisoon Al-Damloji, a female member of parliament
from the secular Iraqia party.
"We are united today in our desire to spread the peace in our
country," she said. "We reject murder, torture and revenge."
Women in Iraq "suffered during Saddam's time and during the
embargo, and now are suffering because of sectarian violence,"
she said.
Iraq's constitution reserves 25 percent of the country's 275 seats
of parliament for women, though not all are currently filled because
in some cases female candidates were unavailable.
Orbia Tawfiq, a professor at Baghdad's College of Arts, said "we
demand that women be given their rights. They should not be oppressed
and they should be treated like human beings.
"Women must not be treated as commodities. They must be granted
freedom in choosing their husbands and careers," she said.
Mohar Abdel Hamid, 38, said that the needs of widows like herself
must be addressed.
"I hope the government listens to us because women have always
suffered in Iraq," she told AFP.
A recent report by US-based Women For Women International said the
state of Iraqi women since the March 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq
has become a "national crisis."
According to the report, released Thursday, 64 percent of the women
surveyed said violence against them had increased since the war.
"When asked why, respondents most commonly said that there
is less respect for women's rights than before, that women are thought
of as possessions and that the economy has gotten worse," it
said.
The report also found that 76 percent of the women interviewed said
that girls in their families were forbidden from attending school.
From:http://www.metimes.com/Politics/2008/03/08/iraqi_women_demand_equality_end_to_violence/afp/
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