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Women Peace Delegates Lobby For Their Rights
ISSUE 62
FRONT PAGE
Feature
Somalia and Survival in the Shadow of the Global Economy - Part 5
Headlines
Hargeysa Mayor Orders Payment of Subsidies for Maandeeq

Funding Somaliland's Poll

Continuity Or Change In Somaliland?

Health
Drug - The Double Edged Knife (Part 2)
Culture
Sahra Siyad: The First Lady of Song
Editorial & Opinion
War May Render Iraq Ungovernable

Flawed Election Might Derail Recognition

Kulmiye is winning; A true President is waiting in the wings

Why We Shouldn’t Elect Rayale Kahin As President

Consider Other Things $75 Billion Can Do

Peace Talks
Women Peace Delegates Lobby For Their Rights

Rocky Road to Peace

International News
Marines Recover Bodies Of Slain Comrades

Ex-Wife Of Former POW In Somalia Recalls What It Was Like

Saudi Arabia Donates Dates To WFP For Somali And Sudanese

Columbia Teacher Comments Irk Some

Amnesty International Condemns 'Safe Haven' Scheme

UK Defends New Asylum Proposals

Out Of Africa, On To A Fresh Start


Nairobi, March 28, 2003 (IRIN): Somali women attending the ongoing peace conference in Nairobi, Kenya, have called for women's rights to be included in all stages of the peace process.

Their call came at a three-day workshop for women delegates, supported by the regional body Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD), the UN Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) and the UN Development Programme (UNDP). The workshop ends on Friday.

On Thursday, the women met the mediator, Bethwel Kiplagat of Kenya, to urge his support for their cause. Somali women delegates have agreed to advocate for at least 25 percent representation in the new institutions, including parliament.

"We will start our effective lobbying soon after we finish this workshop," Somali women's activist Asha Haji Elmi told IRIN. "We are not lobbying for only the 25 percent, but we are advocating a package for women's inclusion in this process, and women's inclusion in every document of this process."

The women's workshop has been reviewing draft reports from six technical committees on core issues of the conflict. Drafts from the key federalism committee recommend only a 10 percent quota for women's representation in the new Somali institutions.

Kiplagat stressed his support for the Somali women and urged them to play a strong part in the peace process.

"I believe the problem of marginalisation of women is discrimination when it comes to education," he told the workshop. He emphasized the need to educate girls.

"We need now affirmative action for the girl child," he said. "This continent and Somalia will not develop if you freeze such a great asset - women." In this regard, he proposed a charter for the education of girls.

"The issue of women is international," said Atsede Zerfu of Ethiopia, who heads IGAD Women's Desk. "The only thing we can do is to use international conventions, the international community, and also influence our men."

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