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No Place for a Woman
The London
Times, Op-Ed
Lesley
Abdela - Shevolution and Eyecatcher Associates
April 29, 2003
http://www.peacewomen.org/news/April%2003/Abdela.html
Just after
the liberation of Basra, as I stared at my TV watching the British
military commander appoint clerics to help to run Iraqs second-largest
city, I realised that there was something familiar about it all
echoes of Bosnia, Kosovo, Timor, Sierra Leone and Afghanistan.
I was witnessing the latest rebirth of a nation in which women are
being almost completely left out of the new power structures and
discussions over the future of their society.
In 1958 Iraq
had one of the first female government ministers in the region.
It was one of the first countries in the Middle East to have a woman
judge. There are many educated Iraqi women. They have a great deal
to contribute to the peace-building and governance process. Women
may seem invisible because they are not looting and fighting, but
that is no reason to exclude them. Fifty-five per cent of Iraqis
are women. There are resourceful leaders among them who deserve
to be recognised as such.
And its
not just the military who need to swap their night-vision goggles
for gender spectacles; diplomats and politicians lack vision too.
Yesterday Jay Garner, the retired US Army general who heads the
Pentagons civil administration in Iraq, held the second meeting
of what has been officially described as representative groups
from across Iraqi society. Garner says he wants to include
fair representation of all ethnic and religious groups, but so far
has made no mention of the largest group in Iraq women.
He says the
aim is for Iraqi people to decide procedures and structures for
choosing an interim government to begin the rebirth of their nation.
I do not know how many women took part in yesterdays meeting,
but it is unlikely to be broadly representative of the population.
At the first post-Baathist meeting in Ur there were 76 men and four
women.
Why is it that
in the aftermath of dictatorship and conflict everyone talks about
human rights and democracy, yet women find themselves having to
fight hard for any voice at all? Hardly days after liberation from
Saddam, Iraqi women fear they will end up living under a distorted
legal system with a constitution denying them almost all their basic
human rights.
On Saturday
I was at a conference in Geneva hosted by the Centre for the Democratic
Control of the Armed Forces, a Porsche-end of the market think tank
funded by the Swiss Government. Twenty of us with international
conflict experience were acting as an advisory board on women and
war. Among us we had experience of conflicts in Africa, the Balkans,
the Middle East, the Caucasus and Asia.
Dr Krishna Ahooja-Patel,
president of the Womens International League for Peace and
Freedom, has spent 25 years working inside the UN system. She spoke
of her frustration: UN Resolution 1325 was passed in 2000,
stating clearly that women must be included in all aspects of peacemaking
and peace-building discussions. It didnt happen in Afghanistan
and so far it doesnt look as though it is being implemented
in Iraq. The question we should ask is Why?
I have been
asking that question almost every waking minute of the past three
weeks. With colleagues, I have been engaged in intensive lobbying
alongside Iraqi women fighting for the right to have an equal place
with men in discussions on the future of their country.
In 2000, Britains
UN Ambassador, Sir Jeremy Greenstock, championed and piloted Resolution
1325 through the Security Council. Its implementation has clearly
not yet become embedded in the workings, nor the psyche, of post-conflict
reconstruction in a way in which equal inclusion of women as peace
builders automatically clicks into place. In post-conflict interim
administrations, the US, UK and UN have a history of latching on
to the first local people to come across their radar screens and
entrenching them in power. These are almost without exception men,
and usually the noisy ones more interested in swag and political
muscle than in such effeminate and tedious concepts as universal
human rights and democracy, though some swiftly learn to use Western-speak
in their siren calls to coalition ears.
Last week, sitting
in the BBC Radio 4 Womans Hour studio, I took part in a discussion
with Iraqi women. The presenter, Jenni Murray, stared at me. Lesley,
havent we had this same conversation before, at the time of
Kosovo, and the time of Sierra Leone, and the time of Timor, and
the time of Afghanistan? Yes, I agreed. Im beginning
to feel like a metronome.
In Kosovo (where
I worked for the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe
as deputy director for democratisation), Igbal Rugova, leader of
Motrat Qiriazi, an umbrella group of rural womens networks,
told me: The international community has marginalised us women
in a way we never experienced before. We have never felt so marginalised
as we feel now.
During the Kosovo
crisis, Tony Blair said repeatedly that the Nato bombing of Serbia
and Kosovo was for democracy and human rights. Apparently not for
women. Within weeks of the Prime Ministers statement, the
UN mission in Kosovo appointed a 17-member interim government and
enabled the appointment of interim municipal governments. All 17
in the interim government and most of the members of the interim
municipalities were men some of them known local mafia
godfathers.
The senior male
diplomats heading the UN and OSCE mission set a target for proportionality
across ethnic groups when deciding on interim government appointments.
They justified ignoring proportionality for women by saying it would
be alien to local culture and tradition. Didnt
they know that women had been judges, lawyers, magistrates, academics,
trade unionists, doctors, activists in civil society?
I had hoped
that out of the manifest failures of Kosovo, a template would spring
to ensure that in the aftermath of conflict and war a nations
women were never again so excluded, derided, patronised and sidelined.
But the following year in Sierrra Leone the British authorities
installed 150 paramount chiefs, of whom 147 were men.
Then in Afghanistan the international community entrenched warlords.
It took a massive international lobby campaign, led in the UK by
Joan Ruddock MP, to get even two Afghan women included at the post-Taliban
Bonn conference. And so far Iraq looks like being just another cut
and paste from the same old outworn, shabby text.
Aided by US
and UK officials, the Iraqi opposition met in London in mid-December.
The Follow-up Co-ordinating Committee (FCC) formed at the end of
the conference contained just three women out of the 65 members.Women
have continued to be significantly marginalised in follow-up opposition
gatherings. In Salahaddin in February, the conferences final
statement made not a single reference to the future of women in
Iraq, nor any reference to their rights or to gender equality.
Alarm bells
are also ringing among those concerned for womens inheritance,
property, land and shelter rights. Garner has said he will set up
a Bosnia-Dayton style commission to arbitrate what is just and fair.
He promises inclusivity for all ethnic groups, religions, cultures
but with no mention of women.
The human rights
lawyer Margaret Owen, the founder of Widows for Peace and Reconstruction,
has observed the failures of a similar process in the Balkans. She
says: The issue of land and property reclamation has particular
implications for women, especially widows and the wives of the disappeared.
Since the Dayton accords in Bosnia they have been unable to return
to their villages because of violence and the threatening presence
of those who supported their abusers.
In March, a
Kurdish womens group founded by Dr Nazand Begikhani, an expert
reporter to several British legal bodies on womens human rights
in the Middle East, sent an open letter to the UN Secretary-General,
Kofi Annan, President George Bush and the European Union. It stated:
If there is to be any hope of securing for Iraq in the post-Saddam
era a democratic federal system based on pluralism, justice and
gender equality, women must be full participants in the process,
not mere spectators.
Last week six
activists travelled from Iraq to Washington to speak for Iraqi women.
Two of them, Rend Rahim Francke and Zainab al-Suwaij, had gone to
the April 15 meeting in Ur to take part in the first gathering of
the FCC after the fall of the Baath regime. They and Iraqi women
inside and outside Iraq were dismayed to discover that only four
of the 80 delegates were women.
In April 23
meetings at the State Department with the Secretary of State, Colin
Powell, and the under-secretary of state for global affairs, Paula
Dobriansky, Rend Rahim Francke, executive director of the Iraq Foundation,
spoke of the challenge Iraqi women face in trying to gain political
participation. Their message: Iraqi women constitute at least 55
per cent of their countrys population and they want a voice
in its rebirth.
Above all, they
want a secular constitution that does not discriminate against women.
Dr Shatha Beserani, an Iraqi doctor living in London, founded the
Iraqi Women for Peace and Democracy Campaign in 2000. She estimates
that despite the noisy Iran-funded religious movement, out of a
population of 25 million as many as 75 per cent would support a
secular constitution. She says any new legal code should repeal
Sharia and introduce a secular legal system that does not discriminate
against women.
Dr Beserani
and other Iraqi women say that any new constitution for Iraq should
be constructed from a gender-balanced team.
There is a precedent.
The negotiating team which drew up the South African Constitution
was 50 per cent female. The former South African High Commissioner
in London, Cheryl Carolus, believes this remarkable gender balance
was fundamental to an outcome acceptable to 26 different political
parties.
One thing must
be made clear in any new world order: if universal human rights
do not obtain precedence over so-called custom and tradition,
several billion women will be treated for ever as pack animals.
It is amazing how men do not view the introduction of computers
and mobile phones as a break with custom and tradition, but the
minute there is discussion of womens advance, men bond across
cultures in defence of local culture and tradition.
We should remind
Iraqi men that Iraqi women shared the horrors of Saddam and the
terrors of bombing and should be taking an equal place in shaping
a peaceful, prosperous future.
And all should
take inspiration from the clarion call enshrined in the magnificent
South African Constitution: United in diversity, based on
democratic values, social justice and fundamental human rights;
and every citizen equally protected by law.
Lesley Abdela
is senior partner in the gender parity and democracy consultants
Shevolution and Eyecatcher Associates - www.shevolution.com
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