Kuwait Times

Samoa election result hailed as victory for women

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Samoa’s cliff-hanger general election is a victory for under-represente­d women in Pacific island politics, regardless of the final outcome, opposition leader Fiame Naomi Mataafa said yesterday. Her FAST party is on the cusp of a major upset after Friday’s vote, leaving incumbent Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegao­i fighting for his political life after 22 years in office.

The result is even more extraordin­ary because FAST has managed to challenge one of the world’s longestser­ving democratic­ally elected leaders just nine months after the party was formed. Mataafa said she was feeling “very thankful” for the support FAST has received, with preliminar­y results showing it deadlocked with the ruling Human Rights Protection Party at 25 seats apiece in the 51-seat parliament. That leaves lone independen­t Tuala Tevaga Iosefo Ponifasio holding the balance of power, with the ability to choose Samoa’s next leader.

Mataafa said she would open discussion­s with Ponifasio yesterday but it could be weeks before an outcome is known as a result would likely be subject to legal challenges. She said even if FAST failed to win government, the level of support for a female-led party was a game-changer for women’s participat­ion in politics.

“I don’t think it’s just (becoming) prime minister, it’s in any field where women have trail-blazed,” she told New Zealand broadcaste­r TVNZ. “I’ve always been conscious of the fact that I’m a role model and of course I’ve been a very strong advocate of women’s participat­ion in politics. “The message for women, particular­ly young women, is that once you open the door you can do this.”

Politics has traditiona­lly been a male preserve in the Pacific islands, with Hilda Heine of the Marshall Islands still the only woman to lead an island nation when she was president from 2016-20. “Women’s representa­tion (globally) is the lowest in the Pacific island states as women hold six percent of seats, and they are not represente­d in parliament­s in three countries,” UN Women said in an assessment released in January by the UN gender equity group. —AFP

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