[nasional_list] [ppiindia] 'Women's Rights Is a Key to Solving Social Problems'

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <"Undisclosed-Recipient:;"@freelists.org>
  • Date: Mon, 13 Feb 2006 06:54:24 +0100

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            Monday, 13, February, 2006 (14, Muharram, 1427)


                  'Women's Rights Is a Key to Solving Social Problems'
                  Maha Akeel, Arab News 


                    
                        

                        Cherie Booth addressing the Jeddah Economic Forum on 
Sunday. (AN photo by Marwan Al-Johani)    
                        
                  JEDDAH, 13 February 2006 - The first session of day two of 
the Seventh Jeddah Economic Forum began with a focus on women. Cherie Booth, or 
as she is more commonly known as Cherie Blair, a lawyer and Queen Council, 
spoke about human rights and women development.

                  "Women's rights is a key to solving social problems," 
emphasized Booth. 

                  Consistent with the forum's theme of honoring identity and 
celebrating common grounds, she said that these rights are not a Western 
concept that is being forced on other cultures as some think. Instead, she 
said, these rights are shared by all religions, including Islam, which has 
given women a special status. She spoke highly of the recent meeting of the 
Organization of the Islamic Conference in Makkah and the declaration made 
putting reform and development as a priority and its inclusion of women in that 
plan.

                  She began by saying that she is speaking as a lawyer, not as 
a representative of any organization or country. She also left immediately 
after giving her speech without allowing anyone the chance to ask her for 
elaborations, for example on women's rights in Iraq after the invasion of 
American and British troops. Nevertheless, she gave an overarching history and 
perspective of the concept of human rights and how it came about in the form of 
a Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the United Nations. It was 
an informative presentation but hardly added a depth to the issue of women's 
plight in the world, whether in the underdeveloped countries or in the 
impoverished inner cities (in the case of the US) and marginalized urban 
suburbs (in the case of Europe) of the developed Western world. She reiterated 
that women everywhere are not getting their equal share of wages, healthcare or 
education.

                  "Equality does not mean everyone has to be the same, but that 
everyone is given equal chance," said Booth.

                  Poverty has a woman's face, as has been said before. Booth 
explains that this is due to women's lack of access, resources and 
opportunities. Women also suffer more than men from abuse, illiteracy and 
diseases, such as HIV. Her point is that no society can develop without 
empowering everyone. 

                  As for the workplace, to increase the number of women and 
their contribution, "we have to enable a better a balance between career and 
family responsibility," she said. 

                  Political representation is another issue for women. She 
praised the steps made by women in the Gulf - the first Kuwaiti women in 
Parliament, women minister in the United Arab Emirates and the women elected to 
the Jeddah Chamber of Commerce and Industry - as examples. But women still have 
a long way to go, not just in the Middle East, but also in England where they 
make only 18 percent of the representatives in the House of Commons - a lower 
percentage than in Iraq and Rwanda, according to Booth. 

                  Societies evolve and their needs and definitions of rights 
change, said Booth, as such people's right changed from being free of tyranny 
to the right for personal development and duties toward their society. Wrapping 
up her speech and going back to the main issue, she said that everyone should 
work together to establish a common dialogue while preserving our collective 
diversity.
                 
           
     


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