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WOMEN SLOWLY MAKING POLITICAL
INROADS
July 14, 2003 (IRIN) In the past, Somali
women have not had a significant role in politics, but there are
now signs that the trend is slowly changing. Although they only
make up a small minority at the peace talks currently underway in
Kenya - with 35 women out of 362 official delegates - this tiny
step is seen as progress.
Many of the women at the current talks come from privileged groups
which have been able to spend time abroad during part or all of
the 13-year civil war.
Sarah Ndegwah manages the Somali Women's Centre at the talks. She
provides resources for women at the conference, and has produced
a
brochure titled, "Women for Peace and Prosperity for All in
Somalia".
A recurring theme in the women's agenda is 25 percent representation
in the new government. "We want people to know that women are
also capable," Ndegwah told IRIN. "These are educated
women who know what they're doing - lawyers, engineers - and they
can also be part of the reconstruction of Somalia."
CHANGING MEN'S ATTITUDES
The women remain optimistic that traditional male attitudes will
change, starting with their male counterparts at the peace conference.
Asha Abdalla, a minister in Somalia's Transitional National Government
(TNG), noted that while most men at the talks had shown support
for women's increased involvement, this had not yet been translated
into overwhelming backing for the women's agenda.
Ibrahim Aan Hassan Kishbur, a delegate from the Rahanweyn Resistance
Army (RRA), told IRIN that women's participation was important.
"Women should play a big role, because if they are missing
from the conference, women's needs will also be absent," he
said.
While many men favoured bringing the issue of women's representation
to a vote, they nevertheless voted against allocating 25 percent
representation to women. Instead, delegates agreed on just 12 percent
of seats in the new parliament for women - only slightly more than
they were allocated at the Arta conference in Djibouti in 2000 which
ushered in the TNG.
"This is impossible because Somali women are more than half
the population," Asha contended.
STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION
But to some, this small amount is a start. Somali-born Zahara Ashkir
Guled has worked as a consultant on gender issues for several international
organisations and is attending her first peace conference.
She said it was unlikely that anyone would become aware of the women's
agenda unless women were present at political meetings. "You
cannot raise your voice unless you are in the room," Zahara
told IRIN.
Zahara, like most women at the talks, said she represented women
and civil society, rather than any clan or political faction. She
said this enabled women to maximise the number of seats they were
allocated as a group.
Asha, and others, said women had not been give sufficient credit
for their crucial role in Somali society, especially during the
war. "For the last 13 years, women have been the breadwinners,
they were supporting the family, from outside and inside Somalia.
The man was absent," she noted.
She called on the international community and the media to give
greater priority to the input of women in the peace process. "It
looks as though they are listening more to those warlords than to
regular people like the civil society, like intellectuals, like
the women's groups," she stressed.
And despite the persistent obstacles, a few women are making their
presence felt in ways that would have been unlikely, if not impossible,
a decade ago. Asha Abdalla recently announced her candidacy for
president of Somalia.
"Hopefully this is the time when a woman can challenge a man,"
she said. "I think Somalia needs a change."
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200307140247.html
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