Tunisia

Women, Revolution, Politics and Power

During the Arab uprisings, an unprecedented number of women took to the streets, paving the way for a more important role in politics. However, in the transitional period that follows, they now have to fight against their exclusion from the political arena.

The extent of their participation in the new political process, the author argues, will depend on three main factors: their contribution to the democratic culture established, the nature and role of political Islam, as well as gender representation in the news media. As her research in Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Libya and Syria suggests, the fight to carry the women‘s newly found political status through the transitional period will blur the conflict lines between the „traditional-religious“ and the „urban-modern-non-religious“ blocs. Arab women are finding new forms of political participation, distinct from the Western models.

Arab States: No Arab Spring without women

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Fri, 2012-01-27 12:59

Summary: 

Under the banner of “No Spring without Women,” a Lebanese feminist organisation has organized a march in Beirut, as part of the 5th New Arab Woman Forum. The slogan of the march is “Sawa Sawa”, which in this context means “Let’s walk together, let’s make it together”, calling for a Spring that includes both men and women. Before getting the invitation to this march, my mind was already preoccupied with the future of Arab women after the revolutions and how women’s status might be impacted in each of the Arab countries. My concern is: can there be Arab union or organisation to sustain Arab women’s status in the post-revolution era?

Women in the Arab world have suffered in the revolutions, but the question now is, what will the outcome of all this suffering and sacrifice be? To date, the revolutions have not resulted in any improvement in women’s status. In Egypt, there are now voices saying that women should leave the revolution to men, and during a demonstration on International Women’s Day in March, men jeered at the women marching, telling them to go home and feed their babies.

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Read more in Alarbiya.net, published 25 January


Iknow Politics attended the Change Your World!—Yahoo! Business & Human Rights Summit on Women, Technology and Social/Digital Media

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Thu, 2012-01-26 04:22

Summary: 

The event, took place in Cairo 18 January 2012, was organized by Yahoo! Business & Human Rights Program, Yahoo! Maktoob, in partnership with Vital Voices, under the banner of "Change Your World!"


The summit brought together women in leadership roles from across the MENA region, to discuss how women can use technology and the web to drive positive change.

 

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iKnow Politics was presented in the panel of “After the Revolution: Elections and e-governance” which discussed the key roles of women in the creating change across the MENA region. The panel discussed how is women leading in the post-revolutionary world? How are technology, the Internet and media being used as platforms for launching campaigns, creating consensus, becoming political leaders, and supporting good governance? What advice or strategies would women who have run give to those waiting in the wings? iKnow Politics was highlighted as an online platform that connect women in MENA together and with other women in politics in the different regions in the world; with members exceeding 13000 from those regions who exchange information and knowledge in this important subject.


Tunisia: Facing up to tyranny: how a girl and her blog helped change the world

Submitted by Beeckmans Ruth on Mon, 2012-01-23 20:02

Summary: 

'I have heard many descriptions for this revolution. Like Facebook Revolution. It was not a Facebook revolution, it started on the ground, when Mohamed Bouazizi set fire to his body, and the people in Sidi Bouzid started to demonstrate and were attacked by police. It cannot be called an internet revolution - hundreds of people lost their lives, people are still injured today. The internet just played the role of the mass media when the journalists couldn't do their work here.''
 

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Egypt: Revolt Loses Legitimacy as Brotherhood Ignores Women Abuse

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Thu, 2012-01-19 07:28

Summary: 

A group of men gathered around Amira El Bakry in Tahrir Square as she brandished a newspaper photo that shocked many Egyptians. It showed troops dragging a female protester along the street, her robe ripped open to reveal a blue bra and bare midriff.

“Is this OK by you?” the 25-year-old El Bakry, her voice shaking with anger, asked the men, as they squinted at the picture and one suggested the protester was trying to cause a scene. Later, El Bakry marched through Tahrir with thousands of women to condemn the brutality and demand that Egypt’s military rulers step down. Some at the Dec. 20 rally wore tight jeans tucked in boots, others were in flowing robes and full-face veils. “The women of Egypt are a red line,” they chanted.

The scene recalled the mass protests of a year ago, also joined by women of all ages and backgrounds. El Bakry supported those efforts to topple Hosni Mubarak, yet she’s worried about the new political order too. Mubarak-era army chiefs are running the country, and Islamist parties with traditional notions of women and their rights are poised to win elections that end this week. “That could be a lose-lose situation for us,” she said. “But we have a role to play, and we’ll have to keep fighting for it.”

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Read more in Bloomberg, posted 18. Jan


International conference: Options for women's political participation.

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Thu, 2011-12-08 00:29
2011-12-08
2011-12-08
US/Eastern
Click here
City & Province/State: 
Copenhagen
Country: 
Denmark
Venue: 

Description: 

 

 

Background

At the beginning of the 21st century, over 95 per cent of the world’s countries have granted women the two most fundamental democratic rights: the right to vote and the right to stand for election. However, universal suffrage has not guaranteed equal access to, or participation in political and decision-making processes.

Alongside these developments, a large number of countries are undergoing various processes of transition, including countries in Sub-Saharan and North Africa. New futures are being defined while internal processes of political, governmental and system change are taking place. During these processes of unrest and turmoil, women tend to be left out of the political and democratic space, where future governance structures are negotiated. Their participation is often hindered in multiple ways. Obstacles include discriminatory legislation, restrictive patriarchal attitudes towards female participation in governance issues, and political violence.

This conference will focus on the challenges related to developing an enabling and democratic political culture for women in such transitional periods.

Leading civil society activists from Zimbabwe and Tunisia will present case studies and engage in discussions with international practitioners and researchers on barriers to women's political participation and inclusion in democratic processes.

The conference will be a platform for the development of recommendations and action points for civil society, donors, governments and the international community.

The purpose of the conference is to:

  • Identify challenges facing women, such as politically motivated violence and exclusion from decision-making processes.
  • Discus best practices of how to develop an enabling political culture and strategies for mobilising women to seek influence.
  • Give recommendations to donors, civil society and human rights activists.

The outcome of the conference will be:

  • A conference brief with recommendation for how civil society and policy makers in Denmark and internationally can address political violence against women.
  • Establishment of a working group to further the agenda.

Speakers include:

Bjørn Førde (main facilitator): Director of the Danish Institute for Parties and Democracy. He is a former Director of the UNDP Oslo Governance Centre, Representative of UNDP in Botswana and member of the Board of Danida. He is educated as a political scientist from the University of Copenhagen, and from 1975 to 2002 he held various positions with the Danish NGO Mellemfolkeligt Samvirke, including that of Secretary General 1995-2002. He has also published more than 25 books on a broad variety of development issues, mostly for educational purposes, but also fiction for children and youth.

Rumbidzai A. Kandawasvika-Nhundu: Senior Programme Manager, Global Programme (Democracy and Gender) at International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA), is a multi-disciplinary gender and development practitioner with several years of hands-on professional experience on Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment initiatives at national, regional and international levels. She has among other functions participated in the SADC region Gender Experts Reference Group for the “Gender in Southern African Politics” research. Competent in the area of knowledge transfer and training on gender mainstreaming in institutions including Parliaments, democracy and governance processes and systems, management of electoral processes from a gender perspective and Additional Empowerment Strategies design and facilitation for women in politics. She joined International IDEA in 2008.

Lovemore Madhuku: Chairperson of the grass-roots movement National Constitutional Assembly (NCA). He has a long history in the struggle for a democratic constitution in Zimbabwe. With strong roots in the labour and democracy movement, he was one of the founding members of the NCA in 1997. In spite of numerous violent, legal and verbal attacks from the authoritarian regime, he has fearlessly pursued his vision of a democratic Zimbabwe and has never diverted from the NCA’s vision of a genuinely people driven constitution. Topic: Political violence against women during elections in Zimbabwe

Munjodzi Mutandiri: Coordinator of the NCA’s International Office in Johannesburg. He has been active in human rights and political issues in Zimbabwe for more than a decade. He is the driving force behind NCA’s international campaign “ACT NOW against political violence, torture and rape” and has been involved in research on mining, development and politics. With a history in the Zimbabwean student movement Zimbabwe National Students Union and Zimbabwe Electoral Support Network he plays an important role in civic and political activism for democracy in Zimbabwe.

Lylia Ben Hamida: Co-founder, member of the board of directors as treasurer, and project manager for a number of projects with TAAMS, a Tunisian Community Development Organisation focusing on social and financial development. Lylia has a background in international business and banking studies, and is engaged in a broad spectre of TAAMS work, including, internally, the development of TAAMS business plan and its financial reporting, and, in its development work, in community needs assessments, micro-credit schemes and now TAAMS citizenship and women’s rights awareness program, with the immediate aim of mobilising women to vote.

Marwa Sharafeldin: Marwa is currently reading for the degree of PhD in Law in the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies. She researches Egyptian NGOs’ efforts to reform the Muslim family law using both Islamic law and international human rights law at one and the same time. Marwa looks into the process of interaction and re-interpretation that takes place when these two bodies of law come into contact in NGOs’ work. Before and during her time in Oxford, Marwa has been the co-founder of several individual NGOs in Egypt, as well as the Network for Women’s Rights Organizations in Egypt and the Young Arab Feminist Network. She also works with the international Musawah movement for Muslim family law reform, and is active on issues related to women and gender in the Middle East.

Soulef Guessoum: Regional Project Manager, Parliaments and Crisis Prevention, BCPR-BDP-Project, Regional Centre in Cairo, UNDP

Piyoo Kochar: Project Manager at International Knowledge Network of Women in Politics, iKNOW Politics, an interactive network of women in politics from around the world who share experiences, access resources and advisory services, and network and collaborate on issues of interest.Piyoo Kochar has profound experiences working on communication for development using emerging technologies to develop programs with focus on women's issues, young people, public health - specializing in developing programs and implementation.

Martin Rosenkilde Pedersen: International Advisor at DanChurchAid, a large Danish NGO that aims to strengthen the world’s poorest people in their struggle for a life in dignity. Martin advises a range of programme countries on Good Governance and Democracy and has extensive knowledge of working with civil society organisations, the shrinking political space dilemma, as well as position and participation in development processes at global and national levels. Martin is actively engaged in the aid effectiveness debate for DanChurchAid and its international network, the ACT Alliance (Action of Churches Together).


Tunisia: The calm after the storm

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Tue, 2011-11-29 13:58

Summary: 

Tunisia now has the chance to repair some of the many flaws in the Arab political fabric - lack of accountability, in-built corruption, an estranged political elite with little connection to wider society, marginalisation of women from political leadership and an Islamist-secularist dichotomy entrenched through state propaganda.

The Constituent Assembly boasts a higher percentage of women than France, Belgium, Ireland, the UK and US. Some 42 of the 49 female members - more than 85 per cent - are from the Islamist Ennahdha party, making it the most progressive Tunisian party in terms of female political representation and one of the most progressive worldwide. A woman has also just been appointed Vice-President of the Assembly, also from Ennahdha.

This outcome could herald a new phase characterised by a genuine commitment to women's status as full and equal partners in public life, rather than the exploitation of women's issues for political point scoring seen under Ben Ali.

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Read more in Al Jazeera, published 28 Nov


Tunisia: Mixed Messages for Women

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Tue, 2011-11-22 08:33

Summary: 

Is the glass half full or half empty?

After the tumult of the Arab Spring, that is the question posed by and for many women affected by the uprisings when it comes to preserving or expanding their rights.

Mr. Ben Ali “gave women some rights,” Ms. Yahyaoui said in an interview. “But because you’re wearing a bikini and drinking beer, you think you’re free? You’re not free. I’d rather have the burqa and democracy,” she said, adding: “And I’m secular.”

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Read more in New York Times, published 21 nov


Tunisia: The Women Of Al-Nahda: Faces Of The New Republic

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Thu, 2011-11-10 08:11

Summary: 

Before January 14, 2011, al-Nahda was the main opposition group in Tunisia. No one, even its most severe critics, could question the fact that it was the most persecuted group in terms of the number of political prisoners, exiles, and disappearances. Its politics aside, al-Nahda did not shy away from challenging both the regime of Ben Ali and that of Bourguiba. For these reasons, some people with whom I talked in Tunisia contended that the win should be seen as a token of recognition on the part of the Tunisian voters for al-Nahda's struggles and sacrifices, not as a validation of its ideology. Be that as it may, that theory will be put to the test a year from now when the party competes again in parliamentarian and presidential elections. In order to understand al-Nahda's background, we ought to examine the background and views of key figures who won seats in the constituency assembly.

Many commentators did not pay attention to Tunisia's Nahda movement before the recent elections. So it is not surprising that when western journalists and political commentators began to notice it, their commentaries lacked context and depth. For example, some of those who noticed that 42 of the 49 women elected to the constituency assembly are members of the Islamist party have theorized that the inclusion of women is a ploy to allay fear that the movement would scale back women's rights. That may be partly true. Those familiar with the history of the movement, however, know that women have always played a leading role. The presence of Souad Abderrahim on top al-Nahda's list in Tunis 2 is a good reminder of the movement's past and a telling indicator of its future.

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Read more on OpEdNews.com, published 8 November


Aspiring for True Democracy: The Role of Women and Youth in the Arab Spring

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Tue, 2011-11-01 06:56
2011-11-08 16:00
Etc/GMT-4
Click here
City & Province/State: 
Washington, DC
Country: 
United States
Venue: 

National Democratic Institute

455 Massachusetts Avenue NW

8th Floor

Washington, DC 20001

Description: 

 

Aspiring for True Democracy:
The Role of Women and Youth
in the Arab Spring

with
Dr. Azza Kamel
Egypt

Dr. Kamel is the director of Appropriate Communication Techniques for Development (ACT), the winner of NDI’s 2011 Madeleine K. Albright Grant. Over the past 18 years, she has worked tirelessly as a women rights activist. Since the fall of the Mubarak regime, ACT has worked to ensure women’s voices are included in the transition process.

Dr. Amal Habib Al Yusuf
Bahrain

A member of the Al Wefaq political society, Dr. Al Yusef is also an activist and ophthalmic surgeon who focuses on defending the rights of Bahraini patients and health care workers. She was one of the medics trapped in the main hospital in Bahrain during a siege by military forces earlier this year.

Rafat Al Akhali
Yemen

Mr. Al Akhali is a youth activist who returned to Yemen from Canada to participate in the revolution.  He is a leader in Resonate! Yemen, an organization that promotes youth engagement on policy initiatives.

As the Arab Spring has moved across the Middle East and North Africa, grassroots calls for democratic reform have opened avenues for increased political participation by traditionally marginalized groups.  Youth and women, often at the vanguard of the reform movements, have seized platforms to present their visions for the future of their countries.  But in many instances they face barriers to achieving decision- and policy-making roles, particularly within traditional political institutions. Panelists will discuss the significant role women and youth played in the recent movements for change and what challenges lie ahead for sustained political engagement.

Facilitated by

Barrie Freeman 
NDI Director, North Africa

Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2011
12 – 1:30 p.m. 
National Democratic Institute
455 Massachusetts Ave., NW, 8th Floor
Washington, DC 20001

Please register by Monday, Nov. 7
at http://www.ndi.org/events_rsvp

Lunch will be served

Cohosted by NDI, iKNOW Politics and Aswat.