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NEPAL: A Small Victory for Nepali
Women
June 24, 2008 - (IPS) Representatives from the
Madhesis, Janajatis, Dalits and other indigenous groups were present
when Nepal’s newly elected constituent assembly sat for its
very first meeting late last month, and 191 of the 601-member assembly
were women.
Despite concerns before the election that women members might not
reach the 33 percent ratio stipulated by the interim constitution
30 women won seats via the first-past-the-post ballot. The proportional
representation ballot allocated 161 seats for women, making the
total number 191, which is 33.21 percent of the 575 elected representatives.
"This is a great accomplishment for all Nepali women,"
says Sarala Lama of Sa-shakti Nepal, a women’s party that
contested this election. After the 1999 general elections less than
six percent -- 12 out of the total 205 representatives -- were women.
In the present constituent assembly 74 women candidates are from
the Community Party of Nepal (Maoist), 39 from the Nepali Congress
(NC), 36 from the Communist Party of Nepal - United Marxist Leninist
(CPN-UML) and 13 from the Tarai-based Madhesi Janadhikar Forum (MJF).
In constituencies like Gorkha-1 and Bardiya-1, which used to be
strongholds of the NC and the UML, Maoist women candidates have
crushed veteran politicians like Chiranjibi Wagle and Bam Dev Gautam.
"In this election people voted for transformation, therefore
it is not surprising that Maoist women have defeated these old male
leaders," says Sarita Giri of Nepal Sadbhabana Party (Anandidebi).
Advocate Sabita Bhandari Baral of the Nepal Bar Association agrees
that Nepalis were desperate for change, and it was the inability
of the old and male politicians to not realise this that brought
about their downfall.
Some elected representatives are war widows. Experts on women’s
issues welcome this, but also raise the point that since the process
of writing the constitution of a country is complicated, and there
are a lot of legal matters involved, it is crucial to have law experts
who understand women’s issues in the assembly.
Giri is not so worried. Women were elected because people trust
them to be good leaders, she says, and anyone who says the elected
women did not go to school is just trying to discourage them.
Maoist representative from Rolpa, Jaypuri Gharti Magar, beat her
Nepali Congress counterpart by more than 22,000 votes. At a public
meeting in Kathmandu last week she recalled her days as a fighter
for the Maoist ‘People’s Liberation Army’. Magar
lost her husband during the Maoist ‘People’s War’.
For years she did not have a permanent home, and while travelling
around Nepal as a fighter she took her infant daughter along.
Margar says that this constituent assembly is special because groups
-- that have hitherto been oppressed -- are represented in this
constituent assembly by women. "There was a time when only
women from high caste could be MPs, this election has changed that
and now it is up to the 191 women of various castes, groups, ethnicities
in the constituent assembly to ensure that the rights of 12.5 million
diverse Nepali women are protected."
Sarala Regmi -- who defeated UML’s Bam Dev Gautam (17,955
to 13,773 votes) -- went back to Bardiya to thank the voters in
her constituency for their support. When she was travelling in the
villages, local women came out in large numbers to meet with her
and congratulate her for having the courage to stand for election
in an area that has been the stronghold of UML for so long. Regmi
has been with the Maoists since the 1990 People’s Movement
but went underground when the Nepal Army killed her husband in 1998.
During the war Regmi used to go from village to village and got
to know voters who were desperate for change, were tired of war
and the same old politicians in power. "It was extremely hard
for some sections of our patriarchal society to accept that women
were on the frontline, sacrificing their lives," recalls Regmi.
"Now they doubt us and say we will not be able to write a good
constitution."
Regmi is confident gender issues will be given a high priority in
her party and trusts that some of her women counterparts will be
leading various committees.
Magar says that although having 33 percent women in the assembly
has been a great victory for them, the presence of women is still
scant. "We are demanding 50 percent representation," she
says.
Sapana Pradhan Malla, who has been nominated by the UML to the constituent
assembly, says that a large number of women in the parliament will
not really make a difference if women-friendly policies are not
made. "Our movement is not against men, it is against the oppressive
behaviour of Nepali patriarchal society, which may not change even
if we have 300 women in the parliament," says Pradhan. She
says that the women representatives and women’s movement should
press for not just gender-sensitive policies but also lobby so that
they are actually implemented.
Gender campaigners warn that women’s issues should not be
sidelined by party politics, and the rising profile of women highlights
an urgent need to restructure political parties to make more room
for them. "The biggest challenge and obstacle for women is
still the male-dominated leadership in the political parties,"
says Giri.
Similarly, coordination between representatives and activists is
imperative to lobby the government on women’s issues. Sushila
Shrestha of the Beyond Beijing Committee says: "This group
will not let any issue go off its radar. We will work as a support
system for women representatives, and help to push women’s
agendas."
Voters across Nepal who wanted change made women win, and as the
constituent assembly sits for meetings to write the constitution
voters are waiting expectantly to see if their votes will make a
difference in the way politics is done.
From:http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=42933
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