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RESOLUTION 1325
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A step forward - but women
in India still underrepresented in politics
May 17, 2009 - (INSTRAW) Sonia Gandhi, Jayalalithaa
Jayaraman and Mamata Bannerjee will be some of the most influential
women in India after the elections. But women are still underrepresented
and the criminalization of politics in the country is highlighted
as a deterrent to women’s participation.
The ruling Congress Party won a dramatic victory on Saturday 16
May in India's month-long elections. A majority of voters endorsed
a second term for Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. The 715 million
voters took to the polls in five stages between 16 April and 13
May.
The Women’s Reservation Bill proposes that 33 percent of the
seats in parliament are to be reserved for women. This level was
not reached, but the new Lok Sabha (the lower house of parliament,
which consists of 552 members) has the highest number of women Members
of Parliament (MP) ever. With 58 women elected, the Lok Sabha has
13 more women MPs than the last House and nine more than the previous
best score of 49. The representation of women has crossed the 10
percent mark for the first time in Indian history, according to
the Times of India.
For this election, parties had pledged again to reserve 33 percent
of seats in the Lok Sabha and in the state assemblies for women.
A measure of poor progress in women´s participation is the
fact that 44 women were elected to parliament in the last general
elections held in 2004 - the exact same number as in the 1984 elections.
Of the 6,538 candidates in the first four stages of the elections,
only 462 were women, the news agency Inter Press Service reported.
One of the impediments to the entry of women into Indian politics
is the criminalization of politics in the country. Crime and corruption
were in fact cited as bigger deterrents than patriarchal attitudes
or any other factor, according to Madhu Kishwar, founder of Manushi
Sangathan, an organisation that works for women's rights.
To contest for a parliamentary seat, the candidate needs to raise
an average of US$2 million dollars, and the taxation system makes
it nearly impossible to fund a candidate or a party legitimately.
“To win the elections, there is a need for both money and
muscle - areas that are often linked to criminality,” said
Ranjana Kumari, president of Women Power Connect, an umbrella for
some 700 women's organisations and individuals to IPS.
''Politics is dirty, and, if you are a woman, you may need the support
of male family members, a father, brother or a husband to act as
a buffer against the payoffs, the land-grabbing, extortion and underhand
dealings,'' said Kishwar.
From: http://www.un-instraw.org/en/media-centre/world-gender-news/a-step-forward-but-women-in-india-still-underrepresented-in-pol.html
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