Thread: Kuwaiti women vote for first time

Results 1 to 2 of 2

  1. #1
    Committed Revolutionary Committed User
    Join Date Nov 2005
    Location 127.0.0.1
    Posts 10,131
    Rep Power 25

    Default

    Originally posted by BBC News
    Polling is taking place in a Kuwaiti council by-election in which women are allowed to vote for the first time.
    Two women are also among eight candidates running for the seat in the Salmiya district, south of the capital.

    The 28,000 eligible voters, 60% of whom are women, are voting in segregated polling booths, a condition demanded by Islamist and tribal MPs.

    Women were granted equal political rights last year and will vote in full legislative polls in 2007.

    Voting was reported to have begun slowly, as Tuesday is a normal working day in the conservative, oil-rich state.
    Kuwait's first women candidates are 32-year-old Jenan Boushehri, a chemical engineer at the Kuwait Municipality, and 48-year-old Khalida Khader, a US-educated physician and a mother of eight.

    "I am so pleased that I have become one of the first Kuwaiti women candidates to run in elections," Dr Khader said in an interview with AFP news agency.

    "I have broken the ice and hope this will benefit the cause of women."

    Historic moment

    Women voters quoted by news agencies reflected the years of frustration which this election finally dispels.

    "They have given us some attention. We became equal," said voter Iman al-Issa talking to AP.

    "It's certainly a historical moment for me. I felt very happy while casting my vote," Afaf Abdullah told AFP outside a polling station.
    "I had participated in co-operative society elections before, but the feeling here is totally different. I feel that justice has been achieved for Kuwaiti women."

    Despite the segregated voting, women were required to show their faces to judges supervising the elections for the purposes of identification.

    There are reports of at least one woman refusing to remove her Islamic veil and leaving the polling station without voting.

    The Salmiya seat of the Kuwait Municipal Council fell vacant when incumbent Abdullah al-Muhailbi was named a minister in the Kuwaiti cabinet formed in February.

    Attempts by the ruling Sabah family to change the male-dominated legislative structure succeeded in May 2005 - after being blocked for six years by tribal and Islamist members of the National Assembly.

    Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser al-Muhammad al-Sabah said on Tuesday that women suffrage boosts Kuwait's international standing.

    "We say to our Kuwait sisters, 'Forward, and take your place with your Kuwaiti brothers'," he said in a statement.
  2. #2
    Join Date Mar 2006
    Location Bahrain
    Posts 358
    Rep Power 14

    Default

    Oh ya..that's the hotest news around in the GCC.
    Women here ( in Bahrain.) went through all this stuff, and came out with a women council,few in the council of state, and couple of ministers...but every thing is still the same, because it is nothing but a procedural step to delude the public with such things .
    I'm sure Socialist Advocate knows batter in what's related to the Kuwaiti society.
    I submit that (such) nations are amoral, anachronistic, and supremely mischievous, since they do not only make wars possible, but also prevent diplomacy and politics from playing the rule they should. -Edward Said

    The more powerful and original a mind , the more incline the more incline towards the religion of solitude. -Aldous Huxley

    veritas lux mea.

Similar Threads

  1. Kuwaiti Women Finally Given Vote
    By RedAnarchist in forum Newswire
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 16th May 2005, 19:05
  2. Kuwaiti troops held for planning attack on US frcs
    By Conghaileach in forum Newswire
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 4th January 2005, 21:43
  3. Time to vote - And vote you shall
    By kidicarus20 in forum Opposing Ideologies
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 25th October 2002, 12:10
  4. Women/July 26th Movement - books/journals on women in the re
    By mujer revolucionaria in forum Cultural
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 7th August 2002, 03:40

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts

Tags for this Thread