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Malian women press for peaceful, fair elections

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Malian women press for peaceful, fair elections

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“Women's organizations have been powerless in the face of everything our sisters have suffered. We are now in a process of national reform; I think that this should be done in a participative, inclusive manner that motivates us to become involved in the electoral process,” says Traoré Nana Sissako, lawyer and Chair of the Malian Women's Rights and Citizenship Group (GP/DCF), which seeks to promote the political participation of women in Mali. - See more at: http://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2013/7/malian-women-press-for-pe…
“Women's organizations have been powerless in the face of everything our sisters have suffered. We are now in a process of national reform; I think that this should be done in a participative, inclusive manner that motivates us to become involved in the electoral process,” says Traoré Nana Sissako, lawyer and Chair of the Malian Women's Rights and Citizenship Group (GP/DCF), which seeks to promote the political participation of women in Mali. - See more at: http://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2013/7/malian-women-press-for-pe…
 
“Women's organizations have been powerless in the face of everything our sisters have suffered. We are now in a process of national reform; I think that this should be done in a participative, inclusive manner that motivates us to become involved in the electoral process,” says Traoré Nana Sissako, lawyer and Chair of the Malian Women's Rights and Citizenship Group (GP/DCF), which seeks to promote the political participation of women in Mali.
 
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“Women's organizations have been powerless in the face of everything our sisters have suffered. We are now in a process of national reform; I think that this should be done in a participative, inclusive manner that motivates us to become involved in the electoral process,” says Traoré Nana Sissako, lawyer and Chair of the Malian Women's Rights and Citizenship Group (GP/DCF), which seeks to promote the political participation of women in Mali. - See more at: http://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2013/7/malian-women-press-for-pe…
“Women's organizations have been powerless in the face of everything our sisters have suffered. We are now in a process of national reform; I think that this should be done in a participative, inclusive manner that motivates us to become involved in the electoral process,” says Traoré Nana Sissako, lawyer and Chair of the Malian Women's Rights and Citizenship Group (GP/DCF), which seeks to promote the political participation of women in Mali. - See more at: http://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2013/7/malian-women-press-for-pe…
 
“Women's organizations have been powerless in the face of everything our sisters have suffered. We are now in a process of national reform; I think that this should be done in a participative, inclusive manner that motivates us to become involved in the electoral process,” says Traoré Nana Sissako, lawyer and Chair of the Malian Women's Rights and Citizenship Group (GP/DCF), which seeks to promote the political participation of women in Mali.
 
Region
Issues