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Thursday, 25 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Status of Palestinian Women and Political Participation

Over history, Palestinian women have participated in national, social and political action. Before the Oslo Agreement (The Oslo Accords of 1993) Palestinian women have participated in national action as they participated in political parties and national events. When the PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization) was established, Palestinian women created their own body by establishing the General Federation for Palestinian Women in order to strengthen women’s participation in developing legislations of the PLO both in Palestine and abroad and to link Palestinian women from different political parties in women action.

After Oslo and the establishment of the PNA (Palestinian National Authority), the avenues of Palestinian women resistance shifted and women began to mobilize within the Palestinian Authority to demand their rights within the concept of citizenship. Palestinian women adopted claiming rights in the laws and legislations.

Palestinian women represent 7.5% of the members of the National Council which is 56 members out of 744 members. In the Central Council, 5 women out of 124. The first woman to be appointed in the Executive Committee of the PLO was in 2009 along with appointing a woman as the head of the Capital Market Committee. In 2010, a woman was appointed for the first time as a governor of the Province of Ramallah and Al-Bireh. Early days of 2011 marked the appointment of the first woman head of the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics.

In addition, the percentage of women’s representation in decision-making positions in public offices is negligible compared with the representation of men. For example, women 4% women were appointed for the position of Assistant Undersecretary for about 96% of men at the same class. Highest percentages of working women were found in positions of class 1 to 10 which totaled about 32% to 68% to men. Women working in public services totaled 31% while men totaled 69% (PCBS-2009).

Palestinian women and UN Resolution 1325 of 2000:

UN Resolution 1325 of the year 2000 calls upon states to support women’s participation in peace negotiation and consolidation, and these range from calls to increase the representation of women at all levels of decision-making in institutions promoting security including conflict resolution and peace processes in addition to their role in the prevention of international armed conflict and play a greater role in preventing local armed conflicts. It also calls for their participation in decision-making positions in order to participate in establishing solutions and peace-making and to appoint more women as special representatives and envoys in order to expand their role in peacekeeping operations including consultation with local and international women’s groups.

In 2006, the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) adopted the UN Security Council Resolution 1325 for the year 2000 and the International Commission for Women was formed to apply the resolution in Palestine. The efforts of women who led this initiative were focused on the international level for global solidarity among women. This initiative included Palestinian women interested in political affairs spectra of various parties.

Significance of UN Resolution 1325 in the Palestinian Context:

The resolution deals with themes of peace, security and women. This means that the resolution connects between the dimensions of the national political dimensions and the social and feminine ones which give it privacy. This makes the resolution eligible to deal with serious issues in the world with national, social, and democratic dimensions. Therefore, states and social and women movements have to adapt the resolution to suit local needs of the state and the level of women development in it.

On the Palestinian level, the wording of the resolution meets with the general program of the Palestinian women’s movement. The importance of the resolution in Palestine comes from the private situation of Palestinian women as they live in the center of two discriminations; that of the occupation and its violence and the other by male domination that stands against full equality with women on the basis of citizenship according to the terms of reference approved by the representative of the Palestinian Declaration of Independence and the Palestinian Basic Law. The Palestinian women can take advantage of the breadth of the scope of the resolution on the geographical level as the resolution does not regard a state without another but respects the strength of women of the world and its people. The geographical breadth of the resolution allows for the possibility of organizing coalitions and developing women networks that press towards its enforcement in counties and among people who suffer the absence of peace and counties where women suffer from marginalization and isolation.

Challenges facing Palestinian women in implementing UN Resolution 1325:

Despite the progress in women’s participation and advanced political positions and PNA’s adoption of the resolution, there are still many areas that are closed in the face of women as a result of male domination of the Palestinian society. Palestinian women live within a traditional, conservative society where they suffer from discrimination based on gender and slow progress on the democratization of their rights including the right to participate in decision-making on the political, economic, and social levels.

As the Palestinian National Authority did not complete the components of a state yet, it weakens the supervision and control over the commitment of the authority to international conventions of human rights and UN resolutions including Resolution 1325. This keeps that implementation of the resolution to be subject to the directives of the PNA and women’s ability to urge the PNA to promote women’s political participation.

The adoption of feminine policies including lobbying, are highly needed by women organizations to enhance women’s participation and access to decision-making positions in political leadership with the assistance of UN Resolution 1325.

References:

Report of the Central Bureau of Statistics entitled “Significant Figures on Palestinian Women (www.pwic.org.ps/akhbar/arqam.html )

Kahdeja Husain Nasr Barghouthi: A lawyer and Human Right and Gender researcher. She holds an MA degree in Law from the University of Damascus, Syria and MA in Gender and Development, Birzeit University, Palestine.

 
 
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