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Nepal's Historic Vote Puts Women
in Running
April 9, 2008 - (WOMENSENEWS)- Nepal has sealed its borders as
it tries to safely forge a new path after 240 years of autocratic
monarchial rule, 10 years of a violent Maoist insurgency and two
years of a wary stability under an interim government.
Tomorrow the country holds elections to form its first Constituent
Assembly.
In addition to governing this tiny Himalayan kingdom, those elected
on April 10 will draft a new constitution and hammer out the role
of the king, who in 2006 relinquished powers to an interim parliament.
Seven major parties and about 50 smaller groups are running candidates.
For women the day is particularly a landmark.
Last year, under the influence of a dominant Maoist faction, the
interim parliament's seven-party coalition framed an interim constitution
that required parties' candidates to be 33 percent female.
Of these, 50 percent have to be filed in the closed lists, which
are selected by voting for parties rather than individuals. The
rest are fielded for direct elections.
Those are high numbers for a society where educational gaps offer
a glimpse at women's longstanding subordinate role. The male literacy
rate is 63 percent, according to statistics from the Nepal Election
Commission; for women it's 35 percent.
"I had to wait so many years and travel to India to complete
my schooling in the 1940s because there was no school for girls
in Nepal then," Sahana Pradhan, the country's interim minister
of foreign affairs, told Women's eNews in a recent interview.
Waiting for Results
While the quotas are high, Sharda Pokharel, a former member of
parliament, is cautious about how they'll translate into election
results.
Pokharel now heads the Women Security Pressure Group, an umbrella
group of women's organizations across Nepal. She suspects parties,
simply to fulfill legal requirements, are fielding weak female
candidates in direct elections for seats where opponents are sure
to win.
Pokharel has been running voter education and awareness programs
since November in all parts of the country.
Women's eNews caught up with her recently during the lunch break
for a workshop with about a hundred female attendees.
Looking beyond the elections, Pokharel was circulating the list
of demands her group wants the next assembly to incorporate into
the constitution, including increased political participation
by women and a 50-percent quota in parliament. The group also
wants a recent law allowing women to inherit property from their
parents to be implemented; a constitutional guarantee of equality;
compulsory education; and greater security from interpersonal
violence, assault, rape and trafficking.
The total number of women seeking direct election is only 367
out of a total of 3,947 candidates.
Nonetheless, many political participants here expect that the
high quotas--33 percent overall and 50 percent in the closed list--should
mean that women wind up taking more than 20 percent of the places
in the assembly.
Maoist Legacy
To the extent women are enjoying new political rights in these
elections Sapana Pradhan-Malla, a lawyer and president of a women's
advocacy group, concedes it is a legacy of the insurgency by the
Maoists, as the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) here is popularly
known.
While the Maoists are associated with armed conflict, totalitarian
tactics and heavy death tolls, their role in the interim government
is associated with pushing for greater political involvement for
women, banning the "untouchable" status of some castes
in the villages and giving women a stake in parental property.
"They had a more gender-friendly agenda," says Pradhan-Malla,
who is running for a seat in Parliament as part of the closed
list of the Communist Party of Nepal-United Marxist Leninist,
the Maoists' archrival party.
Female candidates are facing the same kind of ferocious intimidation
afflicting men.
One woman's house was burned by a party rival and another's car
was stoned and her volunteer workers attacked physically, according
to recent press reports.
Ranjana Sarkar, running as an invisible member of Nepal's United
Marxist Leninist Party, told Women's eNews she had received numerous
threats over the phone telling her to withdraw her candidacy.
Sujata Koirala, the daughter of the current prime minister, who
is running for direct election, was greeted with black flags when
she went to campaign in her southern district. Her car was stoned
and her workers physically attacked in violence that local news
agencies linked to a rival regional party.
Workers for the Marxist Leninist party told Women's eNews that
the house of one of their candidates, Kamala Mahto, was set on
fire.
Nonetheless, Babita Basnet, the 36-year-old editor of a Nepali
weekly and president of a national media monitoring forum of female
journalists based in the capital, remains upbeat about the voting-related
activity focused on women. Efforts are being organized by political
parties and women's groups jointly with international entities
such as the United Nations Development Fund for Women, the U.S.
Agency for International Development and Oxfam, a British relief
organization.
Basnet also says female candidates are exerting influence, even
when they might not win.
As an example she points to Bhimkumari Beuda, an obscure female
candidate with the Nepali Congress party who is running in direct
elections against the Maoist leader, Prachanda, who is likely
to win. Nonetheless Basnet says Beuda is giving her party a lot
of help. Her husband and son were killed by Maoist insurgents
and the candidate says that reminds voters of why they might want
to support an opposing party.
Basnet's monitoring group has been staging street theaters throughout
Nepal's high rocky terrain and its southern plains for the past
year to teach women how to vote. Women who cannot read are taught
how to put their indelible-ink stamp on a ballot and how to identify
different party symbols. Women at polling stations on Thursday
will also provide guidance to female voters.
To emphasize the importance of women's participation in the elections
they have come up with a jingle, "Sambidhan Sabha Laye, Mahila
Ko Aka Le Hero," which means "Look at the Constituent
Assembly Through Women's Eyes."
The group is also helping to arrange for a substantial police
presence at polling stations, including female officers. It plans
to station 100 of its members alongside other observer groups
at polling stations so that female voters, especially in rural
areas, will feel safe.
Other groups that will observe the elections include the Nepal
Election Monitoring Association and the Democratic Electoral Alliance
of Nepal. International groups include the Carter Center, founded
by former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, and the Bangkok, Thailand-based
Asian Network for Free Elections with many female observers participating.
"I have worked with so many women, from the most urban to
the most rural and I find that the woes of working women remain
the same," Basnet told Women's eNews. "Irrespective
of the work they are doing and the money they are earning, they
are both questioned by their family if they ever happen to come
home late. In both scenarios it is their sexuality that is under
the family's scanner."
Aditi Bhaduri is a gender consultant and a journalist based in
India. She filed this story from Kathmandu, Nepal, and will participate
in election observation as a member of the Asian Network for Free
Elections.
From:http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3557
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