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NEPAL: Excluded, Women Seek
International Advice
By: Marty Logan
July 8, 2006 - (IPS) On the evening of Jun 23,
lawyer and activist Sapana Pradhan Malla confided to IPS that the
deputy prime minister had just told a group of women occupying his
office that the committee drafting an interim constitution would
be expanded to include two women. No announcement came, and exactly
a week later Pradhan Malla told IPS, "the announcement will
come in a few hours".
That was one week ago but still no news has arrived.
On Friday, Pradhan Malla and other women from civil society and
political parties united as 'Women in Alliance' sat with UN officials
and international experts to plot out how they can ensure women
will have a say in the 'new Nepal' now under construction. The rebuilding
started after an alliance of seven parties (SPA) led hundreds of
thousands of angry citizens to the streets across this small South
Asian country to protest 14 months of direct rule by King Gyanendra.
Within three weeks, and after 21 deaths, the monarch gave in, agreeing
to restore the House of Representatives, empty since 2002.
Since then, parliament has made many proclamations,
including one meant to signal a bigger role for women in a rejuvenated
democratic Nepal. It reserves one-third of places in the civil service
for women and permits children to take citizenship from their mother
or father, instead of only from the latter. But the proclamation's
words still need to be passed into law and its spirit has yet to
infuse political leaders, say activists. The restored house is 95
percent male and the government's cabinet includes only one woman,
Minister of State for Women Urmila Aryal, who has threatened to
resign if ad hoc bodies like the constitution drafting committee
are not changed to include women.
On Friday, Home Minister Krishna Sitaula said the
government was unable to expand the committee because the SPA was
unable to find a suitable candidate. But new members will be named
Sunday, he added. "If (committee members) are really democrats
then they should just say 'we won't work until women are included',"
activist Stella Tamang told IPS. "I think we have to change
that committee. If we don't succeed in doing that, if we lose that
battle, then it will set a bad precedent," she added at Friday's
meeting, organised by the local United Nations office in the capital
Kathmandu.
Women must be included on these committees, agreed
the representative of the United Nations Population Fund in Nepal,
Junko Sazaki. "Government officials are saying there are no
qualified women but they just have to understand the legal process
and reflect women's voices -- that's all," she said in an interview
after the meeting. The revival of democracy has also signalled a
tentative end to a decade-long Maoist uprising that left 14,000
dead, displaced more than 100,000 others and destroyed millions
of dollars worth of roads, bridges and other infrastructure in one
of the region's least developed countries.
More than one-third of Nepal's population live
on less than one US dollar a day and many villagers still have to
walk hours, if not days, to reach the nearest government centre.
Involving women in processes like demilitarisation, demobilisation
and reintegration (DDR) of Maoist cadres means discussions must
be "much more expansive than women at the talks table",
said Sri Lankan Sunila Abeysekera, with the Global Campaign for
Women's Human Rights. Women's voices must be considered in talk
about rebuilding roads, homes and schools. "For example, everyone
knows that distance from home is a critical factor when it comes
to whether girls attend school," she added. It is also important
that women organise because "whether we like it or not, the
international community is going to come in with a lot of money
plans and programmes. If we're not ready, after five years we will
be swamped," said Abeysekera.
Sazaki said that the work plan to emerge from Friday's
workshop will be presented to a meeting of international donors
working in Nepal in one week. "I can see strong donor interest
especially because 35-40 percent of Maoist combatants are women,"
she added. One of the main tools that the women are using to argue
for their participation is Resolution 1325, adopted by the UN Security
Council in 2000. It urges governments to involve more women in decision-making
during and after conflict situations and asks the UN secretary-general
to see that the world body's peacekeeping operations incorporate
a gender perspective. Unfortunately, 1325 has not been very effective
to date.
Gender perspectives are still not fully integrated
into the terms of reference of peace operations, according to UN
Under-Secretary-General Anwarul Karim Chowdhury, who piloted 1325
through the UN system in 2000 as Bangladeshi ambassador and president
of the Security Council. "We continue to find reports that
women are still very often ignored or excluded from formal processes
of peace negotiations and elections and in the drafting of new constitutions
or legislature frameworks," he told the IPS UN bureau in June.
Nor have process of transitional justice, such
as truth commissions, readily incorporated gender issues, said Vahida
Nainar a legal researcher with the Urgent Action Fund for Women's
Rights based in Boulder, USA. "Looking into the truth about
sexual violence was almost always an after-thought...but in almost
all the (conflict) situations there was rampant sexual violence,"
she told Friday's workshop. Likewise, "in almost all the processes,
reparations for gender-based violence were not identified and if
they were, they were not a priority," added Nainar. Abeysekera
suggested that the former Maoist rebels, now fiercely negotiating
for a role in Nepal's government, will take up the challenge to
include women in post-conflict activities. Mainstream parties, on
the other hand, have the "classic approach": 'Let's get
everything fixed and then deal with women', she added.
From: http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=33902
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