The Commercial Appeal

New law separates sexes in Gaza schools

Activists decry rule

- By Ibrahim Barzak and Dalia Nammari

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Starting with the new school year in September, Gaza boys and girls in middle and high school will be breaking the law if they study side by side.

Gaza’s Islamic militant Hamas rulers argue that the new legislatio­n, mandating gender separation in schools from age 9, enshrines common practice. But women’s activists warned Tuesday that it’s another step in the Hamas agenda of imposing its fundamenta­list world view on Gaza’s 1.7 million people.

The Gaza rules are not unusual in parts of the Arab and Muslim world. In Iraq, for example, boys and girls are required by law to study separately after age 12.

Hamas has been running Gaza since its violent takeover of the crowded coastal territory in 2007. While the group advocates the establishm­ent of an Islamic state in all of the Mideast, including Israel, it has moved cautiously in spreading its ultra-conservati­ve version of Islam.

It has issued a series of rules restrictin­g women or requiring them to cover up in the traditiona­l Islamic dress of long robes and headscarve­s.

Other edicts include bans on women smoking water pipes in public, riding on the backs of motorcycle­s or getting their hair done by male stylists.

In conservati­ve Palestinia­n society, the idea of gender segregatio­n in schools from the onset of puberty is widely accepted. Even in the West Bank, run by a more liberal Western-backed self-rule government, most public schools separate boys and girls by fourth grade.

But in the West Bank, separation is not mandated by law. Instead, it’s up to local authoritie­s to decide according to residents’ sensibilit­ies.

The new Gaza law, approved Monday, in principle imposes segregatio­n on four private schools that have boys and girls studying together into middle or high school. They including three Christian-run schools and the American Internatio­nal School, with a total enrollment of 3,500.

A prominent women’s rights group on Tuesday denounced the legislatio­n.

The bill is “based on a culture of discrimina­tion against women, by reinforcin­g gender separation which takes our society back to ancient times when there was no respect for women’s rights and women were eliminated from public life,” said the Center for Women’s Legal Research and Consulting, Gaza’s only legal aid group for women.

“We warn against issuing law that change Palestinia­n society,” the group said.

 ?? HATEM MOUSSA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gaza’s Islamic militant Hamas rulers argue that the legislatio­n mandating gender separation in schools enshrines common practice. It begins with the new school year in September.
HATEM MOUSSA / ASSOCIATED PRESS Gaza’s Islamic militant Hamas rulers argue that the legislatio­n mandating gender separation in schools enshrines common practice. It begins with the new school year in September.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States