http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/features/2011/08/201181617052432756.html


Tunisia: Women's rights hang in the balance 
While Tunisia's revolution successfully ousted Ben Ali, women's rights could 
now be in jeopardy.
Yasmine Ryan Last Modified: 20 Aug 2011 08:49 
     
      Tunisia's Higher Election Authority announced that, out of the 3.8 
million Tunisians who have voluntarily registered to vote, some 45 per cent are 
women [EPA] 

For 55 years, Tunisia celebrated Women's Day every August 13, representing the 
push for gender equality that has been one of the hallmarks of the North 
African nation's post-colonial era. 

Women were active players in the uprising that ended the rule of Zine Abidine 
Ben Ali, and many hope that event will translate into a more visible role in 
the country’s soon-to-be democratic political life.

Yet some are worried that the rights women have enjoyed for the past five 
decades might soon be swept away by the tide of social conservatism that has 
emerged in the wake of the uprising. 

"We know that the former regime took advantage of women's rights," says Faiza 
Skandrani, who founded an organisation called Equality and Parity shortly after 
the uprising.

Despite the legal rights, women suffered from the same climate of fear and 
oppression as men, she says.

Now that the old regime is out, activists are hoping that this will mean women 
will become politically empowered and active members of the new democracy.

Not everyone shares the same vision of what the new Tunisia should look like, 
and Skandrani says that women's rights activists are facing a conservative 
backlash that is drowning out other perspectives in the media. 

"It is very difficult for us to have our voices heard, whether on the TV or the 
radio," she says. For women and men alike, everything hinges on the election of 
the constituent assembly on October 23.

'Rights' in the balance

That assembly will be tasked with writing a new constitution and choosing what 
form of political system the country will have in the future, rewriting the 
ground rules that have piloted political life in the years immediately after 
Tunisia won full independence from the French.

Al-Nahda, the Islamist party led by Rachid Ghannouchi that was outlawed under 
Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, is one of the most well-organised political movements. 
It enjoys strong support, particularly in rural areas.

Ghannouchi has long called for a moderate, pro-democratic brand of political 
Islam, and has given many interviews promising that fundamental humanism of the 
previous regime is not up for debate.

"I think some values which were values since independence are accepted by all 
parties … [including] Arab-Muslim identity [which] is accepted even by the 
Communists. And women's rights are accepted by all sides, among them 
Islamists," he told me in an interview in Doha, a few weeks after the 
revolution.

But some secularist critics say that Al-Nahda is sending mixed messages, 
playing to more conservative segments of the population even as the party seeks 
to win over more progressive voters. 

Cherifa Abdelhafidh, a mother of three and a practicing Muslim who wears a 
hijab, says she is scared of how Al-Nahda, the country's most influential 
Islamist party, might leverage its newly found political might.

The 41-year-old, who lives with her husband and daughters in the industrial 
coastal city of Sfax, does not agree with the conservative agenda that she 
believes Al-Nahda will pursue if they are given the chance.

"I think they are aggressive. Islam doesn't say that a woman must stay at home, 
that she shouldn't work," she says.

She feels that politicians from Al-Nahda are not being clear about what they 
represent, and that they are using Islam for political aims.

"That's why I'm uneasy. They are taking two [conflicting] stances, to build 
their popularity," she says.

Abdelhafidh battled with conservatism in her own family. She married her 
husband when she was 16, and her father-in-law forced her to quit school.

He forbade her from working, and it was only after he passed away did she begin 
her job as an administrator at a local high school. Abdelhafidh's husband, who 
has very different values from his father, has no problem with her working.

To the contrary, the couple struggled to make ends meet on a single income.

"It's bad for women, and for men too," she says. She supports religious 
freedoms, and thinks the state should allow polygamy.

But the Sfaxian says she plans to cast her vote for one of the country's two 
most well-known centre-left, secular parties - either Ettajdid or the 
Progressive Democratic Party (PDP).

New freedoms?

Other women, meanwhile, see in Al-Nahda the potential to gain new freedoms they 
have never had before.

Manel Sekmani, a 24-year-old who is studying for a masters in genetics in 
Tunis, says the most significant barrier to entering the workforce is 
discrimination against devoted Muslims such as herself.

     
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Al-Nahda is the party, she says, that will challenge the prejudices encouraged 
by previous governments and allow women more, rather than less, liberty. 

"Al-Nahda will protect women's rights," she says. "I was derided during the 
time of Ben Ali and I don't want another government like that."

Like Abdelhafidh, the student rejects conservative interpretations of Islam. In 
her view, however, Al-Nahda is clear on its progressive values and is not 
calling for women to stay at home.

"Women who don't wear headscarves already have freedoms, and those freedoms 
cannot be taken away from them." Sekmani does not want to see strict Islamic 
law introduced, but rather a hybrid legal system that reflects the diversity of 
Tunisian society.

"We live in an Islamic country, but it is also a modern society," she says. 

The young woman's desire to see a fusion of secular and Islamic law, leaving 
existing rights intact, is similar to what some of Al-Nahda's most vocal 
critics are calling for.

She rejects the idea that voters like her are being misled about what Al-Nahda 
really stands for.

Indeed, many of Al-Nahda's most active members are female, and, Farida Laabidi, 
a member of the party's executive branch, says they have some clout within the 
movement. 

"Many thousands of Al-Nahda activists were imprisoned [during the previous 
regime] and it was their wives who worked to support their families," she says.

Laabidi denies that her party is encouraging women to quit their jobs. 

"Women must participate in the economic, social and political life of the 
country," she says.

Rights in jeopardy

The tension between those who want to keep politics and religion separate, and 
those who would like to see Islam become more integral to the Tunisian state is 
hardly new to the North African nation.

At the dawn of independence, even before President Habib Bourguiba abolished 
the monarchy and introduced the present constitution, the anti-colonial leader 
gave Tunisian women legal rights that he hoped would break the shackles of 
tradition.

Bourguiba introduced the "Personal Status Code" (CSP by its French acronym) in 
1956.

Women were given the right to vote and to be elected to parliament, to earn 
equal wages to men and to divorce.

Polygamy was outlawed and a woman's consent became a requirement for marriage.

Then came the legalisation of abortion in 1961, at time when it was still a 
taboo topic in many European countries, including France.

In a 1966 reportage on Tunisian women - marking the tenth anniversary of the 
CSP - the former president said: "Beneath men, who were victims of the colonial 
regime, were women, who were also victims of an appalling situation ... which 
came from old habits, traditions, which have a sacred character, which meant 
that women themselves were resigned to their fate," he said. 

The video shows him lifting rural women's veils, a characteristic act that 
represents emancipation for some, while showing a lack of respect for religious 
beliefs to others. 

Until now, critics of the progressive stance on gender equality have been 
forced into silence.

Under Ben Ali in particular, most prominent Islamists had to chose between 
prison and exile.

The phenomenon that is stoking fears in some quarters is the increasingly 
conservative tone that, they say, is encroaching media, mosques and public 
discussions.

With freedom of speech, topics that have long been taboo in the public arena, 
such as polygamy and the argument that women should stay at home as a solution 
to unemployment, are suddenly arousing widespread debate.

And women are largely being excluded from the discussions.

"There are many political debates taking place, but few women are given the 
chance to participate," says Ahlem Belhaj, president of Tunisian Association of 
Democratic Women (ATFD by its French acronym).

"There is a lack of any debates about women's rights, certainly not in terms of 
how to take them forward," she says.

"Partly, it's a reaction to the way the former regime used women's rights, and 
partly it's a concession to the Islamists."

There have also been a series of murky violent incidents linked to fringe 
Salafist activists, including attacks on a cinema screening a film about 
secularism in June and on a police station in the town of Menzel Bourghiba in 
July. 

Al-Nahda was not involved in these events but neither did the party side 
squarely with secular groups who have come under attack from the 
ultra-conservatives.

"Attacks on our liberty have already begun," Belhaj says.

"Every time [there is an incident] Al-Nahda says it isn't them, but exactly who 
it is, I don't know."

Laabidi says that Al-Nahda is a party based on dialogue and does not condone 
violence.

She stops short of supporting the showing of films like the one that the 
activists deemed an offence to Islam, however, saying it is not the time to 
raise such divisive questions.

"Freedom of expression has its limits," she says.

Activists say the trend is linked to the emergence of a long-suppressed sector 
of Tunisian society that wants to cast off the perceived Western influences in 
favour of a stronger Arab-Islamic identity, looking east to the conservative 
Gulf countries, rather than north. 

This viewpoint is founded on a total rejection of Bourguiba's vision, and is 
about taking society in a very different direction.

Since the late 1980s, Ghannouchi has declared himself in favour of maintaining 
the CSP, given its integral place in contemporary Tunisian society. 

Whether the confusion among many Tunisians about Al-Nahda's programme is the 
result of misinformation against the party, its own deliberate political 
strategy or simply fear born of a lack of information depends on who you ask.

"There are no contradictions. I believe we are clear about our position on 
women," Laabidi says, arguing that much of the fear is based on groundless 
speculation. "It is too early to judge us on our intentions."

For Skandrani, however, there is a deliberate doublespeak.

"They have a double discourse," she says.

In one example of the type of statement that can be interpreted in a number of 
ways, a video posted to his party's Facebook page shows Ghannouchi explaining 
how, in his view, the institution of marriage has been denigrated since 
independence. 

"The problem in Tunisia is that a young man is unable to marry even a single 
woman, let alone many wives," he says in response to a question about polygamy.

"The regimes under Bourguiba and Ben Ali have destroyed our society, and now 
you don't find many children in our schools," he continues - arguing that many 
schools have been forced to close because of "a drop in reproduction caused by 
misguided social polices".

Samir Dilou, Al-Nahda's spokesperson, called polygamy a "fundamental principle" 
of his party's political programme in an interview with Investir en Tunisie 
published on June 1.

"We are determined to add this right to the Tunisian Constitution," he told the 
website. 

In response to the controversy that followed, Dilou released a statement 
arguing he had been misquoted and that the party had no intention of legalising 
polygamy. 

The outsider has no way to judge whether it is Dilou or the journalist who is 
being dishonest - another example of the type of incident that is leading to 
confusion over Al-Nahda's position.

As Laabidi argues, it is impossible to judge Al-Nahda without the party having 
any track record in power.

And whether political parties are the driving force behind the groundswell of 
religious conservatism is another question again. 

Framing the debate

In Sidi Bouzid back in January, a crowd of desperate young men explained their 
anger over their economic, social and political marginalisation under both Ben 
Ali and Bourguiba's governments.

"In Tunis, they are libertines, they have no values," one young man said 
emphatically, asking not to be named at a time when it was too early to take 
freedom of speech for granted. 

We were among the first journalists to reach the town where the revolution 
began and his words were raw, well before the media or opposition parties had 
kicked in to gear. 

Whoever they vote for, the real test of women's engagement in the political 
process will be how many of them vote, and their ability to stand alongside men 
on the campaign trail.

Those who support gender equality obtained a considerable victory in April, 
when the National Council for the Protection of the Revolution, a body created 
to help oversee the transition process, announced that gender parity was an 
obligation for electoral lists.

Come October, 50 per cent of candidates fielded by every party must be female. 
Moreover, the lists must alternate between genders (man-woman-man or 
woman-man-woman), putting Tunisia ahead of not only the Arab world, but also 
most other countries.

The Tunisian Higher Election Authority (ISIE by its French acronym) announced 
on Tuesday that, of the 3.8 million Tunisians who have voluntarily registered 
to vote, some 45 per cent were women. 

The figure given to Al Jazeera by the ISIE a week earlier was 37 per cent, 
suggesting a high number of women enrolled in the last week of inscriptions. 

More than half of the 1.7 million women who signed up are between the ages of 
21 and 30.

So while older Tunisian women are lagging well behind men of their age group, 
younger women are ensuring that they will partake in the fruits of their 
engagement with the uprising - and help to frame the limits of the debate. 

Follow Yasmine Ryan on Twitter: @yasmineryan


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