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Women's 
plight holds back Arab renaissance 
* UN 
report says proportion of women MPs in Arab nations lowest in the world * Calls for reopening of some Islamic jurisprudence
 
 GENEVA: Huge discrimination against women in the Arab world is holding back 
overall economic prosperity and social development in the region, a United 
Nations report said on Wednesday.
 
 “An Arab renaissance cannot be accomplished without the rise of women in Arab 
countries,” the “Arab Human Development Report 2006” said.
 
 “Directly and indirectly, it concerns the well-being of the entire Arab world.”
 
 The UN Development Programme’s report, which was compiled by Arab experts and 
academics, said countries in the region must give women more access to the 
“tools” of development, such as education and health care, and consider positive 
discrimination.
 
 In many nations, women’s exclusion is enshrined in laws that specifically 
restrict their activities, even though the constitutions of most Arab states 
would provide a basis to eliminate bias, according to the report.
 
 “The business of writing the law, applying the law and interpreting the law is 
governed above all by a male-oriented culture,” the report entitled “Towards the 
rise of women in the Arab world” said.
 
 “A complex web of cultural, social, economic and political factors, some 
ambiguous in nature, keeps Arab women in thrall,” the report said, pointing to 
“cultural hangovers” and the way societies are structured to deal with education 
and the family.
 
 Women’s rates of participation in economic activity in the Arab world are lower 
than in any other part of the world, the report said. Female unemployment rates 
are between two and five times higher than those of men in most Arab nations.
 
 Less than 80 percent of girls attend secondary schools in all but four of the 
Arab nations, with the highest rates of deprivation in the less economically 
developed countries. One half of women are illiterate, compared to one third of 
men.
 
 However, the report also highlighted some of the stark differences that exist 
within the Arab world.
 
 In Tunisia, Jordan, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories, more girls are 
enrolled at school than boys. Mediterranean Arab nations were frequently cited 
as providing more rights for women.
 
 Most Arab countries - except Gulf states - granted women the right to vote in 
the 1950s and 1960s, and more governments have been appointing women ministers 
in recent years.
 
 However, the proportion of women parliamentarians in Arab nations remains the 
lowest in the world, just ten percent, and female ministerial posts are often 
“symbolic”, the report said.
 
 Some of its authors argued that mainstream currents of Islam were not the key 
factor hampering women’s empowerment, despite western perceptions.
 
 But the report called for a reopening of some Islamic jurisprudence to reflect 
the different dynamics of modern Arab societies and “fundamental Quranic verses 
that recognise equality and honour human beings”.
 
 Conflicts, foreign occupations, terrorism and the dominance of “conservative and 
inflexible political forces” protecting “masculine culture and values” were the 
biggest obstacles, it added.
 
 Maternal mortality rates are “unacceptably high” in Arab nations, averaging 270 
deaths per 100,000 and ranging from just seven per 100,000 in oil-rich Qatar to 
over 1,000 in impoverished Somalia and Mauritania, the report said. afp
 Source:    
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006%5C12%5C07%5Cstory_7-12-2006_pg4_1 |