South China Morning Post

First female judge presides over hearing at top court

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Radwa Helmi has made history as the first woman judge to sit on the bench of Egypt’s State Council, a top court in the Arab nation.

Helmi, making her appearance in a Cairo courthouse, was among 98 women appointed last year to join the council, one of Egypt’s main judicial bodies, following a decision by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.

“The 5th of March has become a new historical day for Egyptian women,” said the head of the National Council for Women (NCW), Maya Mursi.

The move came ahead of tomorrow’s Internatio­nal Women’s Day.

Women in Egypt, the most populous Arab country, have been fighting an uphill battle for years to secure their rights.

Egypt has hundreds of women lawyers but it took decades for one to move up the judicial ladder and become a judge.

The first was Tahany al-Gebaly, appointed in 2003 to Egypt’s Supreme Constituti­onal Court.

Gebaly held that post for a decade before being removed in 2012 by then Islamist president Mohammed Mursi.

Although no law bars women from being justices in Egypt, the judiciary in the conservati­ve Muslim-majority country has traditiona­lly been a male preserve.

The State Council was set up in 1946 as an independen­t body which mainly adjudicate­s in administra­tive disputes and disciplina­ry cases.

Since Egypt’s founding as a modern state in the 19th century, women have been marginalis­ed.

Women gained the right to vote and run for public office in 1956, but their personal rights have remained flouted.

Most women have no authority over their children or their personal lives, with such responsibi­lity often delegated to male guardians, under Islamic sharia-inspired law.

Women hold about a quarter of cabinet posts and some 168 seats in the country’s 569-member parliament.

In May 2021, the grand imam of the prestigiou­s Cairo-based al-Azhar, Egypt’s highest Sunni institutio­n, weighed in on the debate.

Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb said no religious edict prevents women from holding high-ranking posts, travelling alone or having an equitable share of inheritanc­e rights.

But he stopped short of stating women should have equal rights to men.

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Radwa Helmi sits on the bench of Egypt’s State Council.
Photo: AFP Radwa Helmi sits on the bench of Egypt’s State Council.

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