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"Purple Revolution" News: DON'T DISMISS CHANGES FOR IRAQI WOMEN
Wichita (Kansas) Eagle ^ | 1 March 2005 | MYRIAM MARQUEZ

Posted on 03/01/2005 5:59:20 PM PST by rantblogger

MYRIAM MARQUEZ: DON'T DISMISS CHANGES FOR IRAQI WOMEN

Ever since Safia Taleb al-Suhail triumphantly lifted her purple finger at President Bush in Congress -- signaling women's right to vote in a new Iraq -- the critics have wagged a finger back purporting that nothing will change.

Oh, really?

Where else in the Middle East do women make up almost a third of the parliament?

Because that's what happened in Iraq's elections. It includes 45 women among the 140 members of the Shiite party blessed by Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, hardly known as a liberal. In all, 31 percent of the 275 members of Iraq's new Transitional National Assembly are women, including Kurds and those of other religious faiths. Even Sunnis, who were privileged under Saddam Hussein, will be represented in the new assembly.

That didn't happen by accident. It occurred because women such as Taleb al-Suhail, leader of the Iraqi Women's Political Council, made a big stink when it appeared that the U.S.-appointed Governing Council in Iraq was about to deny women basic civil rights under so-called Resolution 137. Women died fighting that cause last year -- and upped the ante by insisting that women make up at least 40 percent of the new assembly.

Negotiations followed. Some Iraqi men refused to compromise. But in the end, basic human rights prevailed. Iraq's Governing Council set up a complex system of candidate selection for each party with the goal that women could win at least 25 percent of the seats. They surpassed the goal.

Yet there are those who maintain that nothing has changed in Iraq, that women are worse off today than when the Butcher of Baghdad ruled. They refuse to acknowledge any good coming from Bush's admittedly botched, no-exit-strategy, pre-emptive war on Iraq policy.

Power of human spirit

We can disagree with the president about the war. I do. But to not accept, much less praise, the results of Iraq's election smacks of stubborn myopia about the power of the human spirit and the lure of democracy.

Nor should we deny reality. Iraq is no paradise. Despite the election's success, women there continue to live in fear. As a new Amnesty International report outlines, women "remain at risk of death or injury from male relatives if they are accused of behavior determined to have brought dishonor on the family."

Women and girls are disproportionately the victims of rapes and killings by armed thugs of all persuasions. With insurgents still bombing the heck out of neighborhoods, and U.S.-led forces and Iraqi forces storming homes in search of rebels, there are large swaths of Iraq that aren't safe. Abuses at Abu Ghraib prison included women detainees, too.

So, yes, there are huge challenges ahead, but let's not deny the great strides women achieved despite the violence.

Heroic steps

The so-called Iraqi street captured by TV cameras is too often filled with raging men with no woman in sight.

"The general lack of security has forced many women out of public life, and constitutes a major obstacle to the advancement of women's rights," Amnesty notes in its Iraq report.

The one exception was during the election when the world watched smiling Iraqi women walking to the polls, coming back with purple fingers pointed in victory.


They took the first heroic steps on their journey to self-determination and democracy. Let's not diminish what they've done. They made history and are now poised to create a real future for a free Iraq.

Myriam Marquez is a columnist for the Orlando Sentinel.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: democracy; feminism; freedom; iraq; iraqiwomen; purple; purplefinger; purplerevolution

"The general lack of security has forced many women out of public life, and constitutes a major obstacle to the advancement of women's rights," Amnesty notes in its Iraq report.

The one exception was during the election when the world watched smiling Iraqi women walking to the polls, coming back with purple fingers pointed in victory.

Feminists have been immorally silent about treatment of their Arab and African sisters under sharia law.

1 posted on 03/01/2005 5:59:20 PM PST by rantblogger
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To: rantblogger
We can disagree with the president about the war. I do. But to not accept, much less praise, the results of Iraq's election smacks of stubborn myopia about the power of the human spirit and the lure of democracy.

How can you disagree with the war, Bush's "botched, no exit plan preemptive war" (and no doubt illegal), and yet praise the election? Iraqis would have never had the opportunity to vote if it were not for Bush's preemptive war. The hypocrisy is deafening.

The power of the human spirit? They had no problem with Hussein's 'love' of the Iraqi human spirit. Lure of Democracy? We were arrogant to assume that the Iraqi's want democracy, weren't we?
2 posted on 03/01/2005 6:22:34 PM PST by teenyelliott (The more I read about our govt, the more I want to buy an island)
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