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Nepal: Himalayan Women Get Set
For the Fray
Nepal’s shaky new democracy treats women candidates gingerly
April 1, 2008 – (Asia Sentinel) Nepal goes
to the polls next weekend to determine whether the country will
continue with a 250-year-old monarchy or become a federal republic,
with Nepal’s Maoist guerrillas becoming part of the electoral
process after almost 16 years of strife and as many as 13,000 people
killed.
Direct elections will select 240 seats, with 335 to be filled on
the basis of proportional representation, and the remaining 26 through
nomination. Some 55 parties are fielding a record 10,019 candidates.
But although women, 51 percent of Nepal's 27 million population,
played a key role in the pro-democracy movement that began two years
ago and made the election possible, only 3,432 women are among the
candidates. Women are largely thought of by their parties as not
having sufficient appeal to pull off a victory. Of the 4,021 candidates
fighting for the 240 elected seats, only 373 are women.
Several women nominees have been assigned to by their parties to
constituencies where their parties are weak and their rivals formidable
– the most extreme example in Rolpa district in midwestern
Nepal, where a woman, Bhim Kumari Budamagar, is up against one of
the country’s most compelling candidates, Pushpa Kama Dalal,
the chief of the Maoist Party, who is better known as Prachanda,
“the fierce one.”
Although Budamagar's Nepali Congress Party, headed by Prime Minister
Girija Prasad Koirala, is the biggest party in parliament, it has
no presence in Rolpa and Budhamagar is likely to be trounced, analysts
say. In Dang, they expect another Maoist stronghold, Krishna Bahadur
Mahara, the Minister for Information and Communications, and also
a Maoist, to inflict a crushing defeat on his rival, the Nepali
Congress’s Anita Devkota.
In the proportional representation system 3,059 women are contesting
for 5,998 seats, indicating that the parties think it is the banner
that will win, not the individual. But despite the under-representation,
all eyes are on the women contestants. Here are some important ones,
who can be expected to exert a strong influence on Nepali politics
for decades to come despite the clear gender bias:
Sujata Koirala, Prime Minister Koirala's daughter, is contesting
in Sunsari district in south Nepal. The 50-year-old mother of two
has a formidable rival in Upendra Yadav, the chief of the Madhesi
Janadhikar Forum. Sunsari is a key district in the Terai plains
where the Madhesi Janadhikar Forum, a new ethnic party, has established
itself as a rising power. Sujata's chances appear to be slim unless
she manages to swing the Terai or Madhesi community's vote.
Ironically, being the Prime Minister's daughter may be her biggest
hurdle. She is regarded as her father's mouthpiece, delivering what
he can't due because of political considerations. Recently she made
herself unpopular by saying that Nepal needed its king to retain
its unique cultural identity. At a time when parliament has stripped
King Gyanendra of all his power and declared the nation a republic,
the statement is regarded to have been made on behalf of her father,
who couldn't do it himself for fear of the Maoists.
If Sujata has been projected by her father as Nepal’s future
prime minister, Maoists regard their minister for Physical Planning
and Works, Hisila Yami, 48, a professional architect, as being fit
for the top job. Yami is probably the only contestant whose husband
is also contesting a seat. Her husband, fellow architect Dr Baburam
Bhattarai, number two in the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist),
is fighting from Gorkha district in Midwest Nepal, from where the
royal family hails.
"In Gorkha district, people know me as Baburam Bhattarai's
wife," Yami says. "But in Kathmandu valley, people know
me for who I am and what I did."
Yami is contesting from the valley, which is dominated by the Newar
community, to which she belongs. The clannish community also remembers
her father, Dharma Ratna Yami, whose land and property was confiscated
and who was imprisoned for taking part in an earlier pro-democracy
movement. Yami cites her work in building new roads in the capital,
the cleaning of Bagmati, one of the prime rivers in Kathmandu valley;
and efforts to complete an ambitious drinking water project with
the assistance of the Asian Development Bank; as her strengths.
Although not a women's minister, she is trying to garner women's
votes by promising job-oriented training for women from the backward
communities.
A third high-profile debutante is Arzu Rana Deuba, wife of the three-time
prime minister, Sher Bahadur Deuba, and a well-known social worker.
Arzu is not taking part in a direct fight. The Nepali Congress Party
has nominated her for the proportional representation. She runs
three NGOs that help provide education, maternal healthcare and
shelters for victims of domestic violence. If she wins, Arzu intends
to press for reproductive healthcare for women that will be backed
by law, get the dormant domestic violence bill passed and press
for tougher laws to end child labour.
As the elected assembly will write a new constitution, Nepal's third
largest party, the Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist
(UML), has tried to rope in members of the civil society, including
human rights activists and lawyers. For the PR system, it is fielding
apolitical first-timers, like Renu Raj Bhandari, former head of
the women's unit at the National Human Rights Commission, and legal
activist Sapna Pradhan Malla.
Malla's Forum for Law, Women and Development has spearheaded legal
battles to make abortion legal in Nepal, helped divorced Muslim
women get alimony, and stopped the recruitment of minors into the
army and the police.
The 43-year-old Masters in Law from Delhi University says her focus
will be on training the elected members. "You need people who
can contribute to the building of a new Nepal," she says. "How
can they contribute if their own potential has not been realised?"
From:http://asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1130&Itemid=35
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