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   | LAGGING 
FAR BEHIND: WOMEN IN THE MIDDLE EASTJudith Colp Rubin*
 July 18, 
2007
 The following article is an extract from the author's book Women in the Middle 
East (Sharpe, forthcoming).
 
 This article reviews the political and social situation of women in the Islamic 
Middle East over the past decade. It concludes that while these women have been 
guaranteed equal rights under their own constitutions and international laws 
adopted by the government, in practice, they have not enjoyed these rights in 
politics, marriage, divorce, freedom of movement, education, or work.
 Two major studies conducted in 2005 of the situation of women in the Arab Middle 
East states all came to the same conclusion: Women there are lagging behind the 
rest of the world. The May 2005 Freedom House report ranked 16 Arab nations on a 
scale between one and five in several categories related to women's rights, 
including freedom; economic, political, and social rights; and 
nondiscrimination. The highest overall score was given to Tunisia, which 
received an average rating of 3.24, while Saudi Arabia had the lowest score of 
1.26.
 
 "The Middle East is not, of course, the only region of the world where women 
are, in effect, relegated to the status of second-class citizens," the Freedom 
House report stated, pointing out that in Asia, Africa, Latin America, Europe, 
and North America, there is still a gender gap. "It is, however, in these 
countries where the gap between the rights of men and those of women is the most 
visible and significant and where resistance to women's equality has been most 
challenging."[1]
 
 The second study, "Towards the Rise of Women in the Arab World," issued by the 
Arab Human Development Report, which examined the same countries, concluded that 
women there "have entered the twenty-first century still dragging behind them 
the dead weight of such issues as a woman's right to education, work and 
political activity, matters long resolved elsewhere."[2]
 
 The majority of Middle Eastern countries have long had constitutions granting 
women equal rights with men. With the exception of Iran and Qatar, these 
countries have also ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of 
Discrimination Again Women (CEDAW), an international document that calls for 
guaranteeing women's rights. However, these documents have not translated into 
equality in marriage and divorce rights or employment, or to a decline in 
domestic violence against women. One major reason for continued inequality is 
that there have not been enough women from these countries elected to political 
office.
 
 According to a public opinion poll included in the Arab Human Development 
Report, which canvassed participants in four sample Arab countries--Morocco, 
Egypt, Lebanon and Jordan--79 percent said women have an equal right to 
political activity. Women have been able to vote and run for office in 22 Arab 
League countries as well as in Iran and Israel. The two exceptions have been the 
United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Saudi Arabia.
 
 One of the last Middle Eastern countries to grant women suffrage was Kuwait, in 
May 2005, although women there were first promised that right in 1991 by the 
emir, who took seven years to introduce the measure. It was then defeated in 
parliament. This was due in part to liberal members, who while favoring other 
democratizing reforms, opposed female suffrage because they feared that 
women--who would become the majority of the electorate--wouldn't vote for them.
 
 Nor did female voters vote for other women. The first electoral test for female 
voters and candidates in Kuwait was in April 2006, when two women were among the 
11 candidates vying for a seat that had become vacant on the municipal council 
in the district of Salmiyya, 15 kilometers from Kuwait City. Women voters were 
in the majority, but the female candidates lost by wide margins. Female 
candidates have fared equally badly in other countries.
 
 April 2005 statistics from the Interparliamentary Union ranking the 
representation of women in elected governments worldwide found that Arab states 
were at the bottom, with an average of less than seven percent representation in 
the parliament. That was compared to 20 percent in North America, 16 percent in 
sub-Sahara Africa, and 14 percent in Israel. In Iran, women only made up four 
percent of parliament in 2006, while Israel the figure was 15 percent--still 
below that of North America and sub-Sahara Africa.
 
 CONCLUSION
 
 Experts have disagreed as to the causes of the continued gap between female and 
male rights. Some have blamed Islam. Others have blamed the region's economic 
failure, corruption, political oppression, armed conflicts in the region, and 
scarcity of resources. It has not even been clear how eager those in the Arab 
world have been for change. Some 88 percent of those participating in the Arab 
Human Development Report poll said that an Arab human renaissance demanded the 
rise of women. However, when a 2004 poll conducted by Zogby International asked 
men and women in Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Lebanon, and the UAE to rank the 
importance of ten different reform issues, they put women's rights second to 
last in importance.
 
 Women in the Islamic Middle East have been guaranteed equal rights under their 
own constitutions and international laws adopted by the government. Yet women 
have not enjoyed these rights in politics, marriage, divorce, freedom of 
movement, education, or work.
 
 *Judith Colp-Rubin is an author and journalist. She is the author of 
Women in the Middle East, soon to be published by Sharpe Publishers and 
co-author of Yasir Arafat: A Political Biography, (Oxford, 2003), "Hating 
America: A History," (Oxford, 2004) and Anti-American Terrorism in the Middle 
East, (Oxford, 2001). She was also founder and publisher of Women's 
International Net, a magazine about women worldwide. She has reported about 
the Middle East for several publications in North America.
 Source: 
http://americaninfidelsmusts.blogspot.com/2007/07/must-read-lagging-far-behind-women-in.html
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