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BANGLADESH: Divisions over women's
development policy
May 28, 2008 - (IRIN) Two months after it was proposed,
the National Women's Development Policy (NWDP) 2008 is facing fierce
opposition while the government is maintaining a veil of silence
on the subject.
The NWDP suggests legalising equal rights for women - including
property rights – as well as a 40 percent quota for women
on the government's high executive, judiciary and legislative branches,
parliament and local government bodies.
Chief adviser Fakhruddin Ahmed, the country's top official, announced
the policy on 8 March. It was highly acclaimed by the people although
a vocal section of Islamic clerics opposed it.
But despite initial enthusiasm, the government is now keeping silent
about the policy's future.
Although Bangladesh's legal system is secular in character, its
law of inheritance is based on Islamic Sharia rules, whereby a daughter
gets half of what a son inherits.
Women's organisations, NGOs and members of civil society, including
various professional groups, had commended the government for a
"pro-people" and "pro-woman" national policy.
Justice Muhammad Habibur Rahman, former Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court, hailed the proposal as a point of departure from past injustices.
"If implemented properly, it will usher in a new era in freeing
our women folk out of the shackles of the past," he said at
a round table organised by Bangladesh Mohila Parishad (National
Women's Association) in Dhaka.
Mohammad Ruhul Amin, the present Chief Justice, also spoke strongly
in favour of the policy.
Challenges from the clergy
However, a section of Islamic hardliners went up against the NWDP
2008, terming it "anti-Koran" and "anti-Islamic".
They continue to agitate across the country against the policy and
threaten greater violence in future.
On 3 April, Islamic protesters in Chittagong, the second largest
city with a population of six million, demanded immediate withdrawal
of the policy.
Protest rallies were organised all over the country by an umbrella
Islamic group referred to as the Islamic Law Implementation Committee
(ILIC). It threatened to paralyse the country if the government
did not scrap what it termed "anti-Islamic provisions"
in the NWDP.
Led by Maulana Fazlul Haq, chairman of Islami Oikya Jote (United
Islamic Alliance), ILIC announced a grand Islamic rally in Dhaka
on 18 July to press for its demands.
As a result, the government formed a 20-member Ulema (Islamic experts)
committee on 27 March to identify any potential "inconsistencies"
in the NWDP. On 17 April the Ulema committee submitted its recommendation.
"The review committee could not pinpoint any verse in the Koran
that the women's development policy contradicts. It also failed
to show any provision of the policy that contradicted the Koran
and Sunnah [Sayings and lifestyle of Prophet Muhammad]," said
Hafez Maulana Ziaul Hasan, chairman of Sammilito Islami Jote (United
Islamic Alliance), a liberal Islamic organisation.
Development issue
At a press conference on 14 May, more than 25 women's organisations
threatened to seek tougher measures if the government backed out
from its announced policy.
They said the NWDP 2008 was the result of a 30-year struggle fought
by the country's women and a way to ensure women's constitutional
rights.
Jahanara Haque of Dhaka University said the NWDP 2008 was consistent
with the constitution, UN Convention on the Elimination of all Forms
of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and was prepared in the
light of Bangladesh's Millennium Development Goals (MDG) to achieve
overall national development.
Ayesha Khanam, president of Bangladesh Mahila Parishad said: "The
policy is not a religious issue but a development one."
From:http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=78444
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