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Women Develop Next Steps for Full Participation in the New Iraq
Conference topics include constitutional and economic rights,
leadership, security
Amman, Jordan (December 10, 2024)— Iraqi women political
and civilian leaders will convene in Amman, Jordan, to develop
concrete steps to guarantee women’s roles in that country’s
political and economic rebirth. Inclusive Security: Women Waging Peace and Women
for Women International are sponsoring the conference.
Participants will draw on the experience of women in other countries.
Rwanda, a post-conflict society, has come closest to achieving
parity between men and women in government: Women now make up
49 percent of its Parliament, the highest percentage in the world.
Lesser-known models include Argentina, with a 30 percent quota
for women candidates in national elections; India, with one-third
of seats in local municipal bodies reserved for women; and Uganda,
which has one seat reserved for women in each of its parliamentary
districts. Women constitute nearly 40 percent of Parliaments
in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark, an international success story.
What: “Guaranteeing Women a Role in Iraq: Translating
Experiences from Abroad”
Who: The two dozen participants include Raja
Habib Khuzai, member
of the Iraqi Governing Council; Songul
Chapouk, member of the
Iraqi Governing Council; four members of the Baghdad City Advisory
Council; Ambassador Swanee Hunt, Chair, Hunt Alternatives Fund
and Inclusive Security: Women Waging Peace; Zainab Salbi, President and Founder,
Women for Women International; Dr. Vjosa
Dobruna, Waging member
and Former Minister, United Nations Mission in Kosovo; Monica
McWilliams, Waging member and Member of the Northern Ireland
Assembly.
When: Sunday, December 14, 2003, 14:30 - 17:30 PM (2:30
PM - 5:30 EST)
Where: Intercontinental Hotel, Queen Zein Street, Amman, Jordan
Background
Conference participants will identify key priorities to integrate
women fully into all aspects of reconstruction; create a network
of women leaders to collaborate with the interim Governing Council
and the Coalition Provisional Authority; and initiate a plan
to mobilize grassroots advocacy on women’s inclusion. Leaders
from Northern Ireland, Kosovo, and Guatemala will also share
their post-conflict experiences and brainstorm strategies for
Iraq.
“Our intent is to push the agenda for women’s integration
in Iraq,” says Woman Waging Peace founder Swanee Hunt. “Women
comprise 55 - 65 percent of Iraq’s population, but
are not sufficiently included in the country’s leadership.
We want to raise the voices of these women, and allow their new
ideas and opinions to be heard.”
Women for Women International President Zainab Salbi says there’s
no possibility of a democratic Iraq without women’s involvement. “Iraqi
women are full citizens and have a voice in building a future
for their county,” says Salbi. Our hope is that this conference
will provide a forum for Iraqi women to discuss how women will
participate and lead the political, economic or social reconstruction
of the country.”
The seminars on the role of Iraqi women in reconstruction conclude
a related conference sponsored by the World Bank, on women’s
economic rights; and by the United Nations Development Fund for
Women (UNIFEM), on international treaties supporting women’s
empowerment.
Inclusive Security: Women Waging Peace, a network
of women peace builders from conflict areas around the world,
advocates for the full participation
of women in peace negotiations and all phases of reconstruction.
The Waging network includes women from conflict areas ranging
from Iraq to Sri Lanka, Colombia to Sudan, the Middle East to
South Korea. Waging was launched in 1999 to connect these women
with each other and with policy shapers. For more information,
visit www.WomenWagingPeace.net
Women for Women International was founded in 1993 to provide
women survivors of war, civil strife, and other conflicts with
the tools and resources to move from crisis and poverty into
stability and self-sufficiency. Women for Women International,
working in Afghanistan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Colombia, Kosovo,
Nigeria, and Rwanda, established its Iraq program in July 2003.
The organization offers right-awareness and leadership education,
vocational skills training, small business development, microfinance
and other tools for women survivors of war. For more information,
visit www.womenforwomen.org.
The National Endowment for Democracy is funding the conference,
under the patronage of Her Majesty Queen
Rania.
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