LOC12:11
09:11 GMT
By Tamer Aboalenin
GENEVA, March 6 (KUNA) -- Despite a dramatic year marked by significant
political change and democratic transformation in parts of the world, 2011 was
again marked by too little progress on women's political participation and a
continued global lack of political will to change the status quo, says the
international Parliamentary Union (IPU).
In its annual study on women members of parliament (MPs) launched on
Tuesday, IPU found the global average of female parliamentary representation
stood at 19.5 percent in 2011, up from 19 percent in 2010.
This 0.5 percentage point increase has followed similar patterns over the
past decade and underscores the minimal progress in attempts to reach gender
parity in parliamentary representation across the globe this century said the
report.
"Less than one-in-five parliamentarians in the world today are women. It is
a worrying statistic at this point of human development and impossible to
justify. The political will to change this is simply lacking in most cases,"
says Anders B. Johnsson, IPU Secretary General introducing the report.
"Yet again, we see too few women politicians, until there is parity, it
would seem that the right to political participation is an assumption held for
only one group and that women are denied their opportunity to effect social
and economic change through political means," states Johnsson.
In addition, new research carried out by IPU and UN Women and presented in
the Women in Politics 2012 map, revealed progress at the executive level with
the number of countries with women as head of government, head of state or
both having more than doubled since 2005 to 17 in total at the moment.
The percentage of women ministers had also modestly increased from 14.2
percent in 2005 to 16.7 percent in 2012.
Meanwhile, there were also significant setbacks in countries such as Egypt,
Peru, the United Arab Emirates, Estonia, Zambia and Cyprus, which saw the
largest decreases in female representation.
Recent elections in Egypt saw the percentage of women parliamentarians drop
from 12.7 percent to just below 2 percent. Only 10 women now hold
parliamentary seats out of 508 members. Although, there were some
encouraging developments in the Arab world such as Tunisia adopting a law
securing parity on candidate lists and the introduction of quotas for women
parliamentarians in Morocco, which resulted in a 6 percentage point increase
in women MPs last year, the regional average of 10.7 percent is well below the
global figure for female parliamentary representation.
"The Arab Spring has yet to deliver for women in politics. The
opportunities to ensure more women are voted into parliament are there. They
just have to be taken. More than a third of countries with 30 percent or more
women MPs are those that have emerged from conflict and are in transition. The
precedents are there," says Abdelwahad Radi, President of IPU.
"Women were at the forefront of the uprisings in the Middle East. They need
to be at the forefront of parliamentary democracy too", he added.
"For UN Women expanding women's political participation is a top priority,"
said Michelle Bachelet, Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN
Women. "Today I call for greater political will to address the
under-representation of women in politics, which remains one of the largest
gender gaps in the world.
In 2012, UN Women will support UN Member States to increase women's
representation in public office as called for by the UN General Assembly in a
resolution adopted in December."
Data tends to confirm that women would have the same success rate at
elections but face many more obstacles along the way than men.
IPU argues that the solutions are out there but that they need to be
implemented with urgency and real determination.
Political parties have a key role to play by getting more women to stand.
By giving gender parity to candidate lists and by allocating more winnable
seats to women, they would create a more level playing field.
Clear and transparent rules on candidate selection also need to be
established in addition to ensuring the proper funding of women's campaigns.
The effective sanctioning of political parties that fail to facilitate
gender parity or meet quotas would, the Organization argues, show political
commitment to effecting real change.
Until this commitment is in place, quotas remain the most effective route
for increasing women's participation. Out of the 59 countries holding
elections in 2011, 17 of them had legislated quotas.
Women took 27.4 percent of parliamentary seats in these countries as
opposed to 15.7 percent in countries without any form of quotas.
The study does take note of several successes such as the dramatic
improvement in women's political representation in many countries through
elections last year, including Nicaragua, Seychelles, Slovenia, Andorra, Saint
Lucia and Uganda.
The number of lower houses hosting more than 30 per cent women rose from 25
to 30 with a similar trend being witnessed among upper houses. The number of
chambers without any women at all also dropped to seven. (end)
ta.hs
KUNA 061211 Mar 12NNNN