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Iraq: Iraqi Women Fear Going
Public As Candidates
October 6, 2008 – (TIME) The 38-year-old
teacher wanted to participate in Iraq's first provincial elections
in four years — until she realized that a new law would require
the ballot to list her name, not just her party.
Even as violence has declined, lingering fear bred by rampant crime
and a small but die-hard insurgency has left many Iraqi women afraid
to run in the elections, to be held by Jan. 31.
"I feel that I am unprotected," said the teacher, speaking
by telephone on condition of anonymity because of her fears. "I
am not going to run in the elections because I fear for the safety
of members of my family who might be targeted."
The teacher, a Sunni who considers herself a political independent,
hails from Baqouba, a former stronghold of al-Qaida in Iraq some
35 miles northeast of Baghdad. Al-Qaida and other Sunni extremists
have frequently attacked more moderate Sunnis who cooperate with
the Iraqi government or U.S.-led forces.
The election jitters are part of a larger concern about violence
and traditional values or prejudice sidelining women from important
jobs. The constitution provides that men and women have basic legal
rights such as voting and owning property and suing in court. But
deep differences exist within Iraqi society over the role of women
and of Islam.
Under heavy U.S. pressure to promote gender equality, the Iraqis
agreed to a 25 percent quota for women in the last elections for
parliament and provincial councils, both held in 2005. A law paving
the way for the new vote to be held by Jan. 31 maintains that requirement,
opening the door for women to make up at least a quarter of the
provincial councils.
But there's a crucial difference this time.
In the past elections, names did not appear on the ballot —
only numbers and symbols identified with political parties. That
system helped empower well-organized religious parties and left
many Iraqis feeling little connection with elected officials who
were supposed to represent them.
In the new vote, the names of candidates must be presented to voters.
The change to a so-called open list has scared some qualified Iraqis
from running, particularly women. Activists are worried there won't
be enough women to meet the 25 percent threshold, or that the parties
will just find women to act as figureheads to fill the quota.
Said Arikat, a spokesman for the U.N. mission in Iraq, noted that
"some statistics show that when countries move from closed
to open lists, women don't fare as well."
But he said the switch to an open list can also be difficult for
men. "Running for elections in Iraq takes courage and commitment
by all candidates," he said.
Unlike other countries where politicians crave the limelight, Iraqis
generally try to avoid drawing attention to themselves; tens of
thousands of people have been killed for purportedly backing U.S.
efforts or as part of power struggles with rival parties.
Underscoring the dangers, gunmen last week broke into a house and
killed Mohammad Radhi al-Halfi, a contractor who planned to run
as an independent for the provincial council in the former southern
Shiite militia stronghold of Basra.
"We believe that the coming elections are risky, especially
for those independents whose names are disclosed," al-Halfi's
brother Haider said. "We tried our best to prevent him from
participating, but our efforts were in vain and that cost him his
life."
The problem is more acute for women who have come under attack simply
for wearing makeup or refusing to don head scarves and head-to-toe
black robes — behavior deemed un-Islamic by extremists.
Women also have come under scrutiny for defying traditional norms
that discourage them from mixing with men or occupying a public
role.
"The women are afraid because their names will be published
... because of al-Qaida, because of terror groups and extremists,"
said Nirmeen Othman, a former minister for women's affairs.
A 35-year-old female lawyer from the Shiite holy city of Najaf,
who also declined to be identified to avoid being targeted, said
she did not want to put her family in danger.
"I am afraid that some fundamentalists or political groups
might target me in order to ensure that they control the provincial
council," she said. "I might run for the elections in
the future if the security situation is better."
Inaam Hamid, who accepted a spot on the Baghdad provincial council
in 2005 with the main Shiite party the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council
said she'll run for re-election — but will do so as anonymously
as possible.
"I won't put my picture on a poster. I won't use mass media.
I'll depend on the people who know me to get my votes," she
said during a recent interview in her ground floor office at the
provincial government headquarters in Baghdad.
"It's a disaster — the names being out there," Hamid
said, fiddling with her wedding ring as the air conditioner muffled
the noise coming from Iraqi petitioners and a group of U.S. soldiers
in the busy hall of the heavily fortified building.
The 43-year-old former political prisoner and mother of five proudly
ticked off her accomplishments, ranging from helping establish vocational
workshops for women to ensuring that victims of violence are properly
compensated.
Othman, now the environmental minister, said she understands women's
fears of running but said it's important to participate in the elections
to change Iraq.
"We must have women in provincial councils, in governing councils,
in parliament — everywhere if we want to have our voices heard
in decision-making positions," Othman said during an interview
at her Baghdad home in the U.S.-protected Green Zone.
She said some women themselves do not accept the notion of equality
between men and women.
"We must persuade women to vote for women," she said.
"We must also try to teach them how to campaign. It's not easy."
From:http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1847619,00.html
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