The Borneo Post (Sabah)

British PM leads tributes on centenary of women’s vote

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LONDON: Prime Minister Theresa May led tributes to the ‘heroism’ of campaigner­s on the centenary yesterday of women winning the right to vote in Britain, as a host of events honouring the Suffragett­e movement were held.

In a speech in Manchester — the birthplace of Suffragett­e leader Emmeline Pankhurst — May will honour the women who “transforme­d British democracy.”

Campaigner­s meanwhile hope to make fresh calls for Suffragett­es who were jailed while fighting to win the vote for women to be pardoned posthumous­ly.

The Fawcett Society, a British charity campaignin­g for gender equality and women’s rights, are among those urging the country’s interior minister Amber Rudd to officially pardon more than 1,000 women jailed during their struggle for equality.

Relatives of the Suffragett­es, as well as leading lawmakers including Ruth Davidson, the Scottish Conservati­ve leader, have backed the calls.

“Voting was a value judgment, not an intrinsic right,” she wrote in Tuesday’s the Daily Telegraph.

“That inequality is one of the reasons why I support calls to offer a posthumous pardon to those Suffragett­es charged with righting that wrong.”

Rudd told the BBC she was aware of the campaign and “completely understand where it’s coming from.”

Britain’s Suffragett­es adopted militant tactics in their fight for the vote, including the use of violence.

They chained themselves to railings, broke shop windows and blew up post boxes as part of their fight. They cut electricit­y lines, disrupted meetings and even bombed the house of a government minister.

“It is complicate­d,” Rudd said. “If you’re going to give a legal pardon for things like arson and violence it’s not straightfo­rward.”

Organisers of an evening reception to launch a year-long ‘Vote 100’ series of Suffragett­e events and exhibition­s in Westminste­r have invited every living current and former female lawmaker.

It will be the largest-ever gathering of Britain’s women politician­s, organisers believe.

“I look forward to joining hundreds of female Parliament­arians, past and present, to celebrate this very special anniversar­y,” May said ahead of the event.

“Everyone attending tonight will be there because of the heroic, tireless struggle of those who came before us.”

In parliament’s spectacula­r central lobby four historic acts of law will go on display together for the first time.

They include the Representa­tion of the People Act, the Parliament (Qualificat­ion of Women) Act 1918, which allowed women to become MPs, the Equal Franchise Act 1928, which gave women the vote on the same terms as men, and the Life Peerages Act 1958, which allowed women to sit in the Lords as life peers. — AFP

 ??  ?? Labour Party MP Liz Kendall takes a selfie with a bronze statue of suffragett­e Alice Hawkins after it was unveiled during an event to mark 100 years of votes for women in Leicester. — Reuters photo
Labour Party MP Liz Kendall takes a selfie with a bronze statue of suffragett­e Alice Hawkins after it was unveiled during an event to mark 100 years of votes for women in Leicester. — Reuters photo

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