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Quota Law Puts More Women In Armenia's Election

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  • Quota Law Puts More Women In Armenia's Election

    QUOTA LAW PUTS MORE WOMEN IN ARMENIA'S ELECTION
    By Nicole Itano

    Women's eNews, NY
    May 10 2007

    A gender quota law for political parties is putting more women on
    the ballot in the May 12 elections in Armenia, where only seven women
    serve in Parliament. Observers say women are now playing a wider role
    in local politics.

    YEREVAN, Armenia (WOMENSENEWS)--In this country's imposing,
    communist-era parliament building, men in somber suits hurry along
    cavernous hallways with fraying carpets.

    With her colorful jewelry and high heels, Hranush Hakobyan is used
    to standing out from the crowd: just seven of the country's 131
    parliamentarians are women. She is the longest-serving woman in the
    body and the only one directly elected by her constituency rather
    than being appointed by a party to fulfill a gender-quota law that
    she sponsored in 2005.

    On Saturday, May 12, Armenians go to the polls to elect the country's
    next parliament. Even before the elections international observers
    have raised concerns about unfair election practices by the ruling
    party; few expect the election to result in a major shift in power.

    Armenia's parliament faces numerous continuing challenges: high
    rates of poverty, massive emigration and an unfinished war with
    neighboring Azerbaijan over the self-declared ethnic Armenian state
    of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    But voters will determine the role Armenian women will play in helping
    to solve these problems. Women currently comprise less than 5 percent
    of the country's parliamentary members, putting them among the most
    under-represented in the world.

    The participation of women in politics in Armenia, and across the
    South Caucasus region, has declined since the fall of the Soviet Union,
    when quotas for women in office ended.

    Hakobyan's gender-quota legislation that took effect this year may
    help change that. The law requires political parties in Armenia,
    a predominantly Christian nation that became independent in 1991,
    to ensure that women are at least 15 percent of their candidates.

    "It's not that we don't have equal legal status, but we have a gender
    imbalance at the highest levels," she told Women's eNews. "I think
    there is a lot of unexplored potential in Armenian women."

    Hakobyan, a 54-year-old former professor and one of Armenia's best
    known politicians, predicts that the new law will help double women's
    representation in parliament. This would bring the country in line with
    others in the region, but would still put it behind the global average.

    Internationally women are just 17 percent of the members of
    parliamentary bodies, according to the Geneva-based Inter-Parliamentary
    Union. But the problem is particularly acute in the South Caucasus,
    where fragile post-communist democracies have taken few steps to
    encourage greater participation by women in politics.

    Situation in Armenia Despite high levels of education among
    women--60 percent of college students, for example, are female--the
    representation of women in public office in Armenia, with a population
    of 3 million, is among the lowest in the world. Men hold all but one
    ministerial post and all five regional governorships.

    In neighboring Azerbaijan and Georgia, women fare little better. Only
    about 10 percent of parliamentarians in both countries are women,
    although in Georgia the speaker of parliament is female.

    Armineh Arakelian, head of the Armenian office of the International
    Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, based in Stockholm,
    Sweden, says the domination of the country's political system by
    economic cliques and oligarchs is a major hindrance to women.

    Political power is controlled largely by wealthy men, or groups of men,
    who control sectors of the economy.

    "Armenia, like other countries in the Caucuses, has been a very
    patriarchal society," she said. "We have men who are rich, but we
    don't have women oligarchs. We don't have women who have a strong
    position in economic fields."

    Nor, said Arakelian, has there been a grassroots demand from women for
    more representation in politics. Even the new quota was pushed largely
    by international donors and was a requirement for Armenia's entry into
    the Council of Europe, a pan-European body which promotes human rights.

    "You don't have activism, real activism. We don't really have this
    culture in Armenia," Arakelian said. "There is potential. I can see
    it in young people. We just need to support this."

    Mandates Bring Few Results Quotas for women's participation, says
    Arakelian, are a start, but will not solve the underlying problems
    hindering women's fuller political participation.

    In this current election, for example, political parties largely
    obeyed the rule mandating that 15 percent of their candidate lists
    be women. But many female candidates are low on the lists, meaning
    it is unlikely they will actually be elected to parliament.

    Only one party out of dozens running in the election, the Social
    Democrats, has a woman as head. But that party failed to win any
    seats in the last election. Another new party, the Liberal National
    United Party, has made women 44 percent of their candidate list. But
    that party is untried and poorly resourced.

    Bigger parties have been less progressive. Women, for instance,
    are just 15 percent of the ruling Republican Party's list, on whose
    ticket Hakobyan will run this year.

    Alla Bakunts, who works on election and gender issues in Armenia for
    the United Nations Development Program, says women are making better
    progress at the local levels.

    "There are many more women now on the local level, working in local
    government as village heads or in village councils," she said.

    "Countrywide there is a group of about 300 to 400 women who are quite
    capable, very knowledgeable and very aggressive."

    Lagging World Average Hakobyan, a champion of social welfare, education
    and youth issues, says that putting more women in parliament will help
    change legislative priorities in the country. She wants government to
    put more emphasis on social welfare for the poor--the average annual
    per capita income is $1,470--and education for young people.

    "The areas of interest for men are business, the economy, defense,
    trade," she said. "For women, it's different: social protection,
    women and kids, peace, the environment, education, health care,"
    she said. "All those have to be given equal priority."

    Despite the progress, some women in Armenia would like to see even
    stronger efforts to increase the representation of women. A coalition
    called Women Leaders backed by the Washington-based National Democratic
    Institute, a nonprofit that promotes democracy around the world, asked
    parties before this election to commit to making women 25 percent of
    their lists. But that effort was not supported by the governing party,
    the Republican Party, which is expected to remain the largest party
    in parliament after the May 12 elections.

    Ultimately, says Arakelian, increasing the participation of women in
    politics is tied to building stronger democracy across the spectrum.

    "We need more long-term resources, civil education and election
    education," she said. "If not, you won't have substantial positive
    change."

    Nicole Itano is a freelance writer based in Athens, Greece.

    Women's eNews welcomes your comments. E-mail us at
    [email protected].
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