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Arabia
Kuwait Approves Draft Law Giving Women the Vote
2004-05-17
Kuwait's cabinet approved a draft law Sunday allowing women to vote and run in parliamentary polls, moving them a step closer to full political rights they have sought for decades in the conservative Gulf Arab state.
I thought I felt a disturbance in the Force.
The draft needs parliament's approval to pass into law. A decree issued by Emir Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmad al-Sabah giving women the vote was narrowly defeated in the 50-man house in 1999 by an alliance of Islamist and conservative tribal MPs. Kuwaiti women have been fighting for suffrage for more than 40 years, only to be blocked by slack-jawed mouth breathers Islamists and male politicians. "The council (of ministers) decided to approve the draft law and transfer it to the Emir, God protect him, in order to transfer it to the National Assembly," a cabinet statement said. The current parliament in OPEC) member Kuwait was elected in July by an elite group of males who must be 21 years or older and not recently naturalized or members of the armed forces.

The government of Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah, the emir's brother, has made clear it is committed to political and economic reforms in Kuwait, which has one-tenth of global oil reserves. U.S.-allied Kuwait says that pressing ahead with reforms is a top priority as the country promotes itself as a modern investor-friendly nation after the toppling in a U.S.-led war last year of former occupier and Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.

Leading women's rights activist, Dr. Fatima al-Abdali, welcomed the news, adding that the issue of refusing women the vote was "sabotaging Kuwait's image internationally." Islamist and conservative MPs, who wield great influence in parliament, are opposed to Western influences and may prove to be a stumbling block in the face of the new draft. "I'm hopeful," Abdali said. "If this bill is serious and is not just a fight between the Islamist bloc and the democratic bloc, I think women can quickly gain everyone's confidence." Regarded by some as among the most emancipated in the conservative Muslim region, Kuwaiti women have had to sit back and watch their sisters in other Gulf states -- such as Qatar, Bahrain and Oman -- make modest progress. Kuwaiti women serve as diplomats, run businesses and help steer the vital oil industry in the country of 900,000 citizens. They constitute up to 70 percent of college graduates in Kuwait, but account for less than five percent of the country's decision makers. Some have moved up to mid-level public ranks, but none holds a top post such as government minister.
So they spend 70% of their university budgets on people who they then forbid to make a contribution. Smart, very smart.
Signs of change came last October when the government approved allowing women to stand for office and vote in municipal council elections, a move observers hailed then as a first step toward granting women greater political rights. "Kuwaiti women, yes, they want this. Especially the young generation, those in the universities," Abdali told Reuters. "This generation already has active bodies that elect themselves in schools and universities." The Kuwaiti cabinet said its decision was "in appreciation for the vital role that the Kuwaiti woman plays in building and developing Kuwaiti society, and her big sacrifices and the responsible role she has played in the face of all the challenges the country has been subjected to in its history."
Posted by:Steve White

#7  726 was the compromise candidate we decided to go with - the Moon God. 725, well, we don't speak about it.
Posted by: Mahmoud, the Weasel   2004-05-17 1:04:41 PM  

#6  What does god # 726 do, or how about #725? :)
Posted by: Mark Espinola   2004-05-17 11:29:53 AM  

#5  Charles,

Both you infidel! Take a pick from our gallery of 726 gods to choose from...
Posted by: Mahmoud, the Weasel   2004-05-17 11:28:24 AM  

#4  I swear I read after 9/11 that Kuwait shelved imposition of sharia in response to it.

Big turnaround in less than 3 years, only if the parliament approves it, if they don't, 21st century suffraget (sp) movement?

Do they pay taxes? Should start w/holding them.
Posted by: Anonymous2U   2004-05-17 11:17:02 AM  

#3  The draft needs parliament's approval to pass into law.
Let's hope it passes into law this time.
Posted by: TS(vice girl)   2004-05-17 7:29:38 AM  

#2  God protect him

Which God? The one that loves Peace or the one that supports female enslavement?
Posted by: Charles   2004-05-17 2:45:26 AM  

#1  God protect him is right!
Posted by: Mahmoud, the Weasel   2004-05-17 1:56:24 AM  

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