http://www.tehrantimes.com/Description.asp?Da=5/24/2005&Cat=4&Num=004

Lebanese women seek their place in male-dominated parliament 


BEIRUT (AFP) - "In countries like ours, women enter politics in mourning 
clothes". Christian opposition MP Nayla Moawad, who made the comment, is one of 
a few women running for a seat in Lebanon's male- dominated Parliament 

She was propelled onto the tribal political scene by the 1989 murder of her 
husband, president Rene Moawad. 

Most female candidates for the four-stage polls that open May 29 are, like 
Moawad, linked to male political figures. 

Bahia Hariri, who will be running for the fourth time in south Lebanon, is the 
sister of Rafiq Hariri, the five-time former reformist prime minister murdered 
last February 14. 

A UN goodwill ambassador and respected activist who has devoted her life to 
improving women's conditions in Lebanon and other Arab countries, Hariri, 53, 
insists on introducing herself as "the sister of the martyr". 

Ghinwa Jallul, a professor of computer sciences, ran for parliament for the 
first time in 2000 on Hariri's ticket in Beirut and is competing again as a 
candidate for the late premier's Future Bloc. 

"I have no political heritage. I came from a pragmatic background," the 
42-year-old and mother of three told AFP in her family home as her 
nine-year-old sought her attention and permission to go out play with friends. 

Three months after Hariri's death, Bahia and Ghinwa still wear black clothes in 
sign of mourning in keeping with tradition, although as women they have long 
broken ranks with the conservative ways of their country. 

Along with Moawad, they are stalwarts of the anti-Syrian opposition which, 
along with international pressure, helped drive Syrian troops from Lebanon last 
month. 

They are the only three women deputies in the outgoing 128-seat parliament. 

All are widely expected to be re-elected, and will likely be joined by Solange 
Gemayel, widow of slain president and former Christian warlord Bashir Gemayel, 
who was killed in an explosion in 1982. 

A newcomer to politics, Gemayel is running uncontested for the Maronite seat in 
Beirut, on the list of Saad Hariri, the slain ex-premier's son. 

"We hope the Lebanese will become again Lebanese. We hope to put the past 
behind us," she said in one of her first campaign statements, quoting from a 
speech her husband gave two days before he was murdered. 

Female activist Sana Solh said four women deputies in parliament is not enough. 

"We are still being marginalized," said Solh, a vice president of the Lebanese 
Women's Council, a non-government organization that has campaigned to secure a 
female quota to ensure more seats for her peers in parliament. 

"We want 30 percent of parliamentary seats to be held by women," she said. 

Others disagree and say women should win their seats through fair, competitive 
elections. 

"Lebanese laws concerning women date from the Middle Ages," said political 
analyst Samir Franjieh, himself a member of the opposition. 

Nevertheless, Lebanese women are among the most liberated in the Arab world.


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