[list_indonesia] [ppiindia] Traps of empowerment

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <"Undisclosed-Recipient:;"@freelists.org>
  • Date: Sun, 13 Mar 2005 18:45:05 +0100

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http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2005/733/fe1.htm

        The United Nations describes International Women's Day celebrated on 8 
March of every year as a commemoration of "the story of ordinary women as 
makers of history". Al-Ahram Weekly takes the occasion to reflect on the 
progress made in the battle to emancipate woman kind

        Traps of empowerment
        What, asks Fatma Khafagy*, may be the gender of political reform? 

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               Click to view caption 
              The many faces of Egyptian womanhood 
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        Debates surrounding reform in the Middle East have addressed the issue 
of gender and women's empowerment. Experts like Marina Ottaway, who talk about 
the "women's rights trap", have argued that a country cannot be democratic if 
it discriminates against half of its population. Yet the real obstacle to 
democracy in the Arab countries is not discrimination against women but the 
fact that the entire population has only limited political rights. The problem 
has less to do with giving women the same rights as men, more with reforming 
the political system in such a way as to grant the entire population the full 
gamut of civil and political rights as delineated in the Universal Declaration 
of Human Rights and relevant conventions. In the majority of cases, when women 
are treated equally or assigned important policy and legislative positions in 
non-democratic countries, they fail to make progress towards democracy; they 
tend to only exert themselves in the effort to preserve t
 heir own positions, and to maintain the status quo in order to remain in 
power. There is no guarantee that in giving women positions of importance, any 
given society will bring about democracy. In Egypt women occupy several 
important positions in the media, yet they have failed to bring about major 
changes in media policies. Nor have they managed to alter stereotypes of the 
woman in the media. To put it in a nutshell, while a country cannot democratise 
so long as it excludes women, it would be delusional to think that giving women 
the same (limited) rights as men in an autocratic setting will bring a country 
closer to democracy. The two battles -- for women's rights and for democracy -- 
are equally important, and they must be fought together. 

        This line of thinking seems to be particularly true of Egypt. The 
majority of women's rights advocates in government and civil society have 
focussed on analysing gender gaps and calling for bridging them in health, 
education, the economic and political spheres. Their point of reference 
concerns what men have, and their aim is to help women have the same. This has 
done little to mobilise men who themselves have little to say for themselves -- 
an objective that requires evidence of women bringing about good governance. In 
Egypt as in comparable countries, competition among women at the top tends to 
be fierce, with the older chasing the younger as if to mark territory, and no 
effective mechanism to control corruption -- of which many women of status are 
in fact beneficiaries who actively ignore the battle for democratic reform.

        The legal sphere provides both positive and negative signals. The 
current Constitution, issued in 1971, provides for equality between men and 
women in all fields whether political, social or economic. It stipulates that 
all citizens are equal before the law, and holds the state responsible for 
supporting women in combining their reproductive and productive roles.

        On the other hand Egypt ratified the Convention of Elimination of All 
Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) in 1981. But it still refuses to 
sign the Optional Protocol of CEDAW. It had four reservations on CEDAW. The 
first concerns Article 2 on gender equality, on which Egypt stated that it is 
willing to comply provided that such compliance does not run counter to Islamic 
Sharia. The second concerned Article 9, paragraph two, which gives women equal 
rights with respect to the nationality of their children; new jurisdiction has 
since rendered the reservation null and void, however. The third reservation, 
on Article 16, concerns gender equality in matrimonial and family relations 
both during a marriage and on its dissolution. And the fourth reservation, on 
Article 29, concerns the submission to an arbitral body of any dispute that 
arises between states concerning the interpretation or application of the 
convention. In 2001, Egypt presented its third and combined
  fourth and fifth reports to the CEDAW Committee. The concluding remarks of 
the committee recommended lifting reservations on CEDAW, intensifying awareness 
raising programmes, eliminating negative stereotypes of women, especially in 
the media, affirming the multi-dimensional and cross-cutting nature of 
HIV/AIDS, raising the number of women at all levels of decision-making and 
addressing issues like violence against women.

        There have been positive amendments to some discriminatory laws in the 
last few years. The rape law was amended to punish the rapist even if he is 
willing to marry the victim. Women can leave the country without their 
husbands' approval. And the khul' grants women the right to divorce 
irrespective of the husband's consent, providing that they forgo their 
financial rights. The family court law was also issued to facilitate procedures 
and implementation of court rulings concerning the family. However, there are 
still a number of laws that constitute gender discrimination and violate 
women's rights such as the penal law governing adultery and prostitution. 
Likewise there remains a need for stronger laws to prohibit domestic violence, 
crimes of honour and similar problems.

        The legal system in Egypt is contradictory in that it guarantees 
women's rights in the public arena, restricting them in the private. The 
personal status law, for example, permits not only male polygamy but the right 
of the husband to divorce his wife for no good reason, and the expulsion of a 
divorced woman from the marital residence providing she has no children or her 
children are beyond custody age. Family law prioritises the reproductive role 
of woman, assuming that men alone are responsible for providing for the family. 
It places the protection of the family unit above individual rights within the 
family, giving men privileges to go with the role of sole provider. Likewise 
women are not treated as individuals but rather as wives, mothers and daughters 
expected to obey the patriarch; and their role, especially in the case of 
divorce, will bring no perks of its own. 

        Economic rights are further determined by the woman's position within 
the family. Because the family remains the basic unit of Egyptian society, 
family structure and relations play a significant role in determining women's 
economic opportunities (what kind of jobs they should take, how many hours they 
can work, how close their workplace should be to their homes, whether they can 
take jobs that require travelling, etc.) Women are expected to have jobs that 
do not contradict their role as wives and mothers. A deeply embedded belief 
that the woman's most important role is that of mistress of the household 
limits women's opportunities in the public sphere. Though the government has 
declared its commitment to increasing educational and work opportunities for 
females and expanding the scope of their political participation, the personal 
status law works in a contrary manner, perpetuating the status quo and thus 
making it difficult for women to combine productive with reprod
 uctive roles. Based on erroneous interpretation of religious precepts, such 
laws reflect cultural beliefs and tend to have a power preservation nature.

        Yet the problem is not always with the law alone. Often it is the 
application of the law that undermines women's rights. Judges in many cases are 
influenced by the same patriarchal biases of society and to which they were 
subject during their early socialisation. They have little sympathy with a 
woman who initiates divorce, or one who suffers abuse at the hands of her 
husband. Their verdicts reflect such biases all too often, and the fact that no 
woman judges can bring change to the judiciary system, especially with regard 
to family law, only makes the situation worse. Because the law is mostly 
implemented by men (in the police and justice departments), women who have 
court rulings that give them custody rights, to alimony, for example, are often 
unable to implement them. Likewise, though the labour law does not discriminate 
against women, they are often denied top managerial posts; women who have 
temporary contracts are often denied maternity leave. 

        Girls are socialised to consider marriage life's mission, because a 
woman does not have status unless she is married. As a result, women tend to 
accept and tolerate injustices that take place in the family. Many women, 
especially from low- and middle-income classes, tend to sacrifice their 
individual rights for the sake of preserving the marriage. Control of women's 
sexuality is another obstacle to their practice of rights. Religious extremists 
place the blame for excessive libidinal drive on women alone, with the result 
that FGM is universally practised and, increasingly, veiling as well. Many such 
factors create further obstacles of their own.

        Several stakeholders can contribute to meeting the challenges at hand: 
civil society, government bodies, regional and international organisations. The 
secular feminist movement in Egypt is fragmented, its various arms weak and 
isolated with very little coordination between them. They lack a unified 
agenda, failing to agree on even the outline of project on which they can work 
together. In addition, they are subject to an Islamist critique that condemns 
their work as anti-Islamic evil -- the implementation of a Western agenda. Yet 
a change in the personal status law will affect the lives of every class of 
women in Egypt, and it is something that should be approached collectively. 
Because millions of women suffer the brunt of this law, millions can be 
mobilised in the battle to reform it.

        Women's groups and NGOs must forgo the leadership competitions in which 
they tend to engage, arguing about who should lead women's liberation in Egypt. 
In this regard Egyptians might learn from Moroccans, who have made significant 
advances in the last few years, mobilising a strong movement to alter the 
moudouna of personal status law and enhancing female political participation; 
they also have a good model for rotating leadership.

        The government should start with amending laws that discriminate 
against women, consulting with women's groups and civil society at large and 
fulfilling the stipulations of the Constitution regarding facilitating the 
combination of both the productive and the reproductive role. There are 
important positions that women are deprived of occupying, and the government 
should open them up without scruples. It should also control religious 
fundamentalism, preventing the media from spreading misconceptions that result 
in the subordination of women. 

        And international and regional organisations should work along parallel 
tracks, funding NGOs and women's groups in the hope of building a sustainable 
and powerful women's movement; and they should fund on the basis of women's 
groups' priorities, not their own. One wonders why international organisations 
fund the government to undertake tasks NGOs can do better, something that tends 
to weaken civil society, especially in the light of the lack of trust between 
it and the government.

        We need to stop talking about women's rights and start working towards 
the rights of all citizens including women. The battle for reform, democracy 
and good governance remains essentially a human rights battle, and Western 
concepts about the importance of bridging gender gaps constitute an 
inappropriate methodology that has cost us many valuable years already. 
Bridging gaps is relevant only when the minority and not the majority is 
excluded. And how to bring the majority back to the mainstream is a battle for 
both women and men.

        * The writer is the director of the Ombudsman Office of the National 
Council for Women. 
     
     



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