http://dawn.com/2013/03/20/gender-battles-at-the-un/

Gender battles at the UN
>From the Newspaper | Rafia Zakaria | 

ON March 10, more than halfway through the meetings of the United Nations 
Commission on the Status of Women, delegates that had come together from 
countries all around the world had failed to reach an agreement on a joint 
statement.

This statement, normally issued at the end of the meeting, reiterates and 
renews commitments of governments to women’s issues. This year the negotiations 
had been thwarted by numerous obstacles. Foremost among them were the issues of 
reproductive rights, gender and militarism and alleged “traditions” that some 
nations claimed were being violated by the language of the proposed 
declaration. The objectors included, among others, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, 
Russia, Poland and the Vatican.

Their differences and the possibility that the meeting could end without any 
agreement prompted the New York Times to publish a scathing editorial 
criticising the progress of the negotiations.

Beginning with the mention of Malala Yousafzai, the editorial decried the 
callousness of those stalling talks and lamented the use of the familiar excuse 
of “religion, custom and tradition” as a means for governments to duck their 
responsibilities to eliminate violence against women.

Much of the opposition, noted the editorial, came from the usual suspects: 
conservative American Christian religious groups who oppose abortion rights and 
conservative Muslim countries.

Four days later, there was good news. At the conclusion of the 57th session on 
the Commission on the Status of Women, it was announced that agreement had 
indeed been reached, and a document detailing the conclusions of the session 
was released.

The agreement reiterated the global nature of the problem of violence against 
women, proclaimed a commitment by all the delegates to eliminate violence 
against women and to promote and protect women’s rights and fundamental 
freedoms.

At the same time, an analysis of the dividing lines along which negotiations 
stalled provides some crucial insights into the challenges before women’s 
rights activists around the world, particularly in Muslim countries.

The meeting was attended by representative of nearly 6,000 NGOs from around the 
world. Most of these delegates do not have direct access to the negotiations 
and are housed instead in a building across the street from the UN building 
itself.

Here, the women who work in women’s NGOs around the world have to watch the 
representatives of their countries present gender issues in ways they know are 
inaccurate.

Members of Iranian NGOs, for example, have to watch glossy presentations by 
their representatives that tout progress in women’s rights. This goes against 
the ground realities which they have witnessed.

This year, the dividing line among those actually negotiating at the UN focused 
on religion, with countries such as Iran, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Bangladesh, 
Yemen, the Vatican and several more opposing various references.

The basis of opposition by the Egyptians was highlighted in a statement 
released by the Muslim Brotherhood on March 13, just before the meeting ended. 
According to the Brotherhood’s statement, the proposed document’s title 
Eliminating and preventing all forms of violence against women and girls was 
“deceptive” and “included articles that contradicted the principles of Islam 
and its ethics”. The Brotherhood criticised the document’s treatment of women 
who practise sex outside marriage as legitimate and equal to women who do not 
do so, and accused it of “protecting women who work in prostitution”. The 
Brotherhood also found it objectionable that the document took the right of 
divorce “away from the husband”, handing it instead to the judiciary.

The disagreements of the Muslim Brotherhood are not surprising as their views 
on the issues are well-known — as are those of countries such as Saudi Arabia 
and Iran that have long opposed the empowerment of women.

What is more troubling, however, is remembering that in the Egyptian case, all 
these views are being presented by representatives that have been selected via 
the electoral process by populations that know full well their perspective on 
women’s rights.

Given this, not only do they bring with them the legitimacy of public support, 
their vehement opposition calls into question their commitment to implementing 
any of the prescriptions for empowerment negotiated at the UN even previously.

In simple terms, then, the negotiations illustrate two conundrums, the solution 
of which is crucial to women’s empowerment.

The first is a necessary realignment of those working on empowerment in 
countries such as Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Egypt, where those purporting 
to be representatives of religion are not allowed to discard women’s rights as 
being anti-religion.

This must and can be done by NGOs working at the local level to demonstrate 
that their policies and work are directed towards the welfare of the same women 
that religious parties purport to represent.

The second is a politicisation of NGO work so that it becomes part of the 
political and electoral process at the local level and cannot be relegated to 
the margins at the global level.

The sidelining of NGOs in the UN negotiation process in which only 
representatives of countries can participate means that if women’s rights are 
ever to go beyond paeans and promises, they must gain for their constituency 
some political legitimacy and accountability.

In the Pakistani context this second issue means an urgent need for an umbrella 
body of NGOs working on women’s issues that must collectively demand from 
Pakistan’s political parties a set of commitments about the future of women’s 
rights in the country.

Unless the leaders of the next government can be pinned down now, before 
elections, to support principles of gender equality, Pakistani women’s rights 
activists will face the same situation as their Egyptian counterparts whose 
empowerment priorities have been rudely rejected by the Muslim Brotherhood.

The writer is an attorney teaching constitutional law and political philosophy.

[email protected]


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