The 5th
Conference of Iraqi Women’s
League
(24-25 July 2005)
Held under the
slogan:
“A
Peaceful and Democratic Iraq is the Guarantee for Women's Equality
and Children's Happiness”
The 5th
Conference of Iraqi Women’s
League (IWL) was held in Baghdad during the period 24-25 July 2005,
under the slogan:
“A
Peaceful and Democratic Iraq is Guarantee for Women’s
Equality and Children's Happiness”.
It was attended by 98 delegates. The opening session was given the
name “Martyr
Ayda Yassin”,
in memory of the prominent leading figure of IWL who
“disappeared”
after being detained in 1980 by security forces of Saddam’s
dictatorial regime.
The Conference
endorsed a general report that dealt with major developments during
the past decades and their impact on Iraqi society and the position
of Iraqi women.
The report pointed
out that the social and economic conditions in the country had
deteriorated enormously as a result of the total and
all-encompassing crisis of dictatorship during its reign of
repression, as well as its internal and external wars. Iraqi women
were in the forefront of victims of dictatorship, burdened with the
consequences of catastrophic political decisions. They had to
shoulder full responsibility for their families as a result of the
loss of sons or husbands, whether in terror campaigns of physical
liquidation or during the three wars waged by the ousted regime.
Women had also the job of caring for war victims who were left
disabled. They also became targets for political detention,
humiliation, rape and various kinds of torture in prisons, and often
ending up in mass graves.
As a result of poor
economic conditions and rampant poverty, women were forced to take
up difficult and dangerous jobs, under extremely complex conditions.
They came to face directly the manifestation of social corruption,
as well as systematic corruption practised by the regime’s
leading figures and stooges. All these factors led to the
fragmentation of families. The regime encouraged the revival of
outdated customs and traditions that humiliate women and degrade
their dignity. ,This in turn was used as a justification for the
oppression and injustice against women, within family relations or
in marriage, both as mothers and divorced women. Legislations and
laws were enacted that debased the human dignity of women and
reinforced their women’s
position as an underclass.
The report drew
attention to the
“Faith
Campaign”
personally launched by the dictator Saddam Hussein, that deprived
women of the rights that they had won over previous decades with
their own struggle and supported by democratic and progressive
forces in Iraqi society. The dictatorship’s
policy during its final years meant that women were trapped at home,
isolated from fields of work and general activity.
The report added
that the above-mentioned conditions, that were described only
briefly, did not end with the shameful downfall of dictatorship in
April 2003. Our Iraqi people and social forces aspiring for social
change, including the Iraqi Women’s
League (IWL), are therefore determined to fight to tackle the legacy
of dictatorship. Accordingly, the IWL strives to lay the proper
foundations for a civilized society, based on democracy in economic,
social and cultural fields. This vision shapes its understanding of
social change, progress, women’s
rights and their fundamental rights.
The report dealt
with the position of Iraqi women after the war and the fall of
dictatorship, with new political and social manifestations emerging
with subsequent effects on all Iraqis, especially Iraqi women. Iraq
now witnesses a new situation:, getting rid of dictatorship but
falling under occupation. Refusal by the occupying forces to hand
back political power and national sovereignty, as well as the
responsibility for security, to the Iraqis, and the destruction of
principal structures of the Iraqi state, has led to the
deterioration of the security situation. Gangs of organised
criminals, along with extremist reactionary forces and remnants of
the dictatorial regime, are waging bloody terror against the Iraqi
people under the pretext of resisting the occupation. Iraqi women
have become an easier target for these gangs. In addition to
arbitrary car bombings and explosions, women have been kidnapped,
held as hostages. In addition, women have suffered from murder,
barbaric slaughtering and rape.
Meanwhile, the
forces of political Islam in the southern and central areas of the
country have exploited the social atmosphere resulting from decades
of dictatorship’s
rule, and its so-called
“Faith
Campaign”,
to put forward their political alternative, with practical measures
to implement their concept for the
“Islamization
of society”.
This is achieved through imposing constraints on public and personal
freedoms of individuals, especially with regard to women’s
personal and civil freedoms. In this context, a psychological
atmosphere has been promoted to impose changes on Iraqi women in a
coercive manner, , for example imposing the wearing of Hijab in some
areas. The attempt to abolish the Personal Status Law (in late 2003)
signalled the intention to reverse women’s
civil status. It has to be pointed out that the existing Personal
Status Law was actually based on various denominations of Islamic
law, and the alternative meant a return to sectarian jurisprudence
in the field of personal status.
Iraqi women have
managed to participate in political life during the past two years,
though in a limited way. A number of women participated in the
Governing Council, the Interim and Transitional Governments, and the
National Assembly. The Iraqi State’s
Administrative Law (the interim constitution) stipulated that the
percentage of women in the elected National Assembly must be no less
than 25%. Democratic women’s
organisations played an active role in defeating Decree 137, issued
by the Governing Council (in late 2003), that was effectively aimed
at abolishing the Personal Status Law. An Iraqi Women Network was
also set up, encompassing more than 50 women organisations.
During the past two
years, the Iraqi Women’s
League (IWL) participated in a host of activities concerned with
women’s
rights. IWL activists led the first women’s
demonstration in Baghdad after the fall of dictatorship. The League
initially faced the task of rebuilding its organisations in most
Iraqi cities under the above-mentioned complex conditions. But this
task faced a lot of obstacles as a result of the prevailing security
and political conditions, thus hindering its fulfilment to the level
desired by IWL. Further consideration of the current situation and
work is needed, developing plans to utilize the potential of IWL.
The essence of IWL’s
work, throughout its long history of struggle over more than half a
century, lies in connecting between its fight for the freedom and
sovereignty of the homeland and the struggle for women rights and
children’s
happiness. This is based on its awareness that women’s
liberation can only be achieved with the liberation of the society.
It is not an organisation that exists outside the context of the
Iraqi society’s
history and its political, social and economic contradictions. IWL
also believes that the liberation of women is not an elitist type of
work, or one that is part of charitable or humanitarian activity.
IWL’s
work and struggle is aimed for women’s
rights and freedoms that are achieved as part and parcel of the
struggle for social change, progress and democracy.
The report also
presented IWL’s
understanding of civil society organisations, as a means for public
benefit rather than personal benefit or for the purpose of hegemony
by political parties that are in power or outside it. Struggle must
be waged against the latter tendencies, and against anything that
leads to marginalizing IWL’s
role and conception of civil society organisations.
Civil society is not
an alternative to struggle for social change and progress; rather it
is one of its manifestations. Overlooking this fact, or not acting
in accordance with it, in spite of being real advocates of civil
society as part of our developmental and enlightened project, will
harm the future of civil society and nullify its real functions.
This is why IWL’s
work in the field of civil society organisations needs to be
connected with our struggle to deepen and consolidate democracy.
Work Among Women
Masses
The experience of
IWL’s
work throughout its long history has highlighted the fact that it
becomes an effective mass force in society, and achieves gains for
Iraqi women, when it is engaged in daily mass work, actively
involved in residential areas and women’s
gatherings, raising daily demands, helping to tackle social problems
in urban areas, promoting health awareness, opening centres for
eradicating illiteracy, and through raising the level of awareness
of women in the countryside.
IWL activists had
never been tied down to office work … IWL will not emulate some
women fronts and organisations that want to gain a foothold through
spending money or grants among women with the aim of buying off
people. The secret of IWL’s
success lies in developing close, strong and steady relations with
the mass of women.
The need for the
existence of IWL lies in undertaking this leading role, fearless of
giving sacrifice, as it had often done throughout its history.
Furthermore, unless the forces of political Islam can be countered
by mass democratic struggle, any constitutional and political gains
that have been made may be stripped of their democratic content.
The report drew
attention to the concept of women’s
rights on national and international levels, and the need to defend
these rights. IWL will follow developments in women’s
movements internationally, interact with them, and participate in
formulating the principal guidelines concerning women rights on
international level. Undertaking this task successfully requires an
in-depth study of our society, drawing programs on the basis of
existing facts, and relying on figures and statistics.
The report stressed
the need for rejuvenating IWL’s
methods of work, by discarding spontaneity, and acting in a spirit
of solidarity as women fighting for a cause. This requires conveying
accumulated experience, and helping young cadres to assume their
role in IWL’s
leadership, with the consent and support of women masses. It is
essential to emphasize the issue of expanding democracy in daily
work, involving as many members as possible in decision making,
displaying transparency and a critical spirit, and empowering IWL
organisations in the provinces and towns.
A spirit of
initiative, collective work and approaching the masses on the basis
of properly considered programmes, can help to achieve a qualitative
change in IWL’s
work.
Immediate Tasks
The report concluded
by calling for the need to act as follows:
- Providing
security and peace in our homeland should be one of the principal
tasks for IWL.
- Struggle to end
the occupation and achieve full restoration of national sovereignty,
and to eliminate the legacy of dictatorship, especially in the
fields that concern women’s
rights and their fundamental freedoms.
- Empowering women
and ensuring their full participation, equally, in all aspects of
society’s
life, including participation in the decision making process and
holding positions in government, are fundamental issues for
achieving equality, development and peace. Possible alliances must
therefore be developed to achieve this objective, and to increase
the present minimum 25% quota for women participation in the
National Assembly to 40%. It also requires ensuring active
participation of women in drafting the constitution, and that
includes Iraq’s
endorsement of all international covenants and agreements that
guarantee women’s
rights.
- Eliminating
poverty through reliance on economic growth, social development,
environment protection and providing social security require the
involvement of women in economic and social development, achieving
equal opportunities, and equal and full participation of women and
men. All forms of pressure must therefore be exercised on the
authorities, now and in future, so that this orientation is
implemented in government policies. It must not be considered a
minor demand.
- The battle of
democratic freedoms, the battle of enlightenment, rationalism and
the culture of tolerance and accepting the
‘Other’,
and strengthening dialogue, is a principal battle for IWL. This is
so because women’s
rights and their principal freedoms are very closely connected to
achieving these objectives. The IWL has to work for the unity in
action of the women’s
movement on the basis of diversity, pluralism and respect for the
cultural specificities of the constituent components of Iraqi
people, through developing forms of coordination and joint action,
while stressing the need for maintaining IWL’s
independence in its decisions and general policies. The IWL believes
that its main field of work in this respect lies among women masses,
to win more gains for women and guarantee, in practice, the rights
and freedom stipulated in the constitution and relevant
legislations.
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