Kuwait Times

Women account for quarter of world MPs, but progress slowing

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GENEVA: A quarter of all lawmakers serving in national parliament­s worldwide are women, the Internatio­nal Parliament­ary Union said Friday, warning though that progress towards gender parity was slowing amid significan­t “pushback”. In 2019, women accounted for 24.9 percent of parliament­arians worldwide, the IPU, which

was founded in 1889 and is one of the world’s oldest internatio­nal organizati­ons, said in a fresh report.

“There has been considerab­le progress” in recent years, IPU Secretary-General Martin Chungong told reporters in Geneva, pointing out that the percentage back in 1995 stood at just 11.3 percent. “There has been a shift in the way people think,” he said, pointing out that a quarter century ago the ambition was to get women to the 30-percent mark, while today “the idea of having 50-50 in parliament is the norm.”

Four countries have reached full gender parity: Rwanda, Cuba, Bolivia and the United Arab Emirates. Today, the Americas has the best gender balance in parliament, counting 31.3 percent women MPs across

the region, ahead of Europe which counts just under 30 percent. The Pacific has the worst record on female representa­tion in parliament, with only 19.4 percent, and three countries in this region - Micronesia, Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu - have no women members of parliament at all.

Chungong warned that worldwide there was now clearly “a slowdown in the growth of women’s parliament­ary participat­ion.” Last year, women’s global representa­tion in parliament grew by only 0.6 percent, after an already modest increase of 0.9 percent a year earlier. “There seems to be pushback when it comes to women’s political participat­ion, and it is important that we push back against pushback,” he said. —AFP

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