Fatumo Dayib during interview with the Nation on October 14, 2016. She
is eyeing the Somalia presidential seat in the ongoing elections.
Raped, abused and subjected to genital
mutilation, many women suffer terribly in Somalia, an unrepentantly
patriarchal country shown by successive surveys as one of the worst
places to be female.
A quota
reserving 30 percent of parliamentary seats for women in current
elections is supposed to help bring change and place at least a share of
political power in female hands — but it faces stiff resistance.
"Somali
women participate in daily life but when it comes to politics it is
challenging," said Deqa Yasin, the female deputy head of the national
election organising body.
Under
international pressure, Somalia's top politicians — federal and state
leaders, all men, known as the National Leadership Forum — in August
announced the 30 percent female quota be applied to the 54 Senate seats
and the 275 parliamentary seats.
The
quota also applies to the 14,025 electoral college delegates who are the
only people out of perhaps 12 million Somalis to vote for members of
parliament.
After years of strife,
political wrangling and insecurity mean the Horn of Africa nation was
unable to hold elections by universal suffrage.
But
promises of female empowerment have not been kept. As of Thursday, just
23 of 142 parliamentary seats (16 percent) and 10 out of 43 senate
seats (23 percent) had been won by women.
The
previous unicameral parliament had 14 percent women, so the fresh
figures are a small improvement. It is unclear what, if anything, might
be done when the final tally falls short of the quota.
MEN, GUNS, MONEY
Clan
and tradition are at the heart of Somalia's electoral process, which
means women are not. The 51 members of each electoral college that votes
for a given parliamentary seat are themselves chosen by a group of 135
traditional male elders.
In what has
been called a "limited" election, the senators and MPs — once all
elected — will come together to vote for a new president, but the
planned date of November 30 will not be met.
Faced
with the ruling on a female quota, many clan leaders do not wish to be
represented by women and regard female seats as wasted.
Some
of the many delays in the election timetable have been caused by
arguments and horse-trading over which clan would have to allow one of
its precious seats to be reserved for a woman.
The
reluctance means that the 30 percent quota is unlikely to be met, said
Michael Keating, the UN's top representative in Somalia.
Despite
the challenges "there's been a slight change of political culture"
because of it, with more women involved than in the past, according to
Keating.
Decades of conflict have
played a role. A secular dictatorship in which women held public posts
was overthrown in 1991 by a loose alliance of clan-based militias with
warlord bosses under whom women were increasingly repressed.
Men
— usually with guns and always after money — have ruled since that time
and presided over Somalia's collapse into the world's pre-eminent
failed state.
WE ARE NOT UNIQUE
Some argue that the time has come to give women a chance to remedy the situation.
Miriam
Aweis, 46, won a seat reserved for women in the port city of Kismayo.
She said that during the long years of war, women were "the backbone of
the community" yet "the traditional system we have" excludes them from
politics.
As minister for women in 2011, Aweis was an early fighter for a quota of females in politics.
"We had to talk to the politicians to get them to accept that women are part of this process and decision-making," she said.
When
six of Somalia's federal states submitted initial lists of candidates
for the regionally-based Senate, some included notorious warlords — but
no women — showing a lack of willingness even to pay lip service to
female involvement in politics.
UN
complaints about the warlords were ignored, but the all-male lists were
sent back for breaking the electoral rules, said Yasin at the election
committee.
"I can't change the Somali mindset or culture, but rules and regulations are the weapons I have," she said.
"It's Somali culture but it's in other cultures as well: America just elected Trump. We are not unique."
Source- Daily Nation
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