Oman Daily Observer

Kenya court rules one-third of MPs must be women

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NAIROBI: Kenyan activists on Monday welcomed a High Court ruling giving parliament 60 days to ensure a third of lawmakers are women or face dissolutio­n.

The ruling follows a lengthy struggle to increase women’s political representa­tion in the patriarcha­l society.

Kenya’s 2010 constituti­on guarantees women a third of seats in parliament, but its male-dominated assembly has repeatedly frustrated efforts to pass legislatio­n needed to enact the quota.

“The ruling is good for women who, because of patriarcha­l cultural background­s, cannot effectivel­y compete with men,” Josephine Mongare, chairwoman of the Federation of Women Lawyers in Kenya (FIDA), told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “This is the nearest we have come to the twothirds constituti­onal requiremen­t.”

Women vying for office in Kenya frequently face violence and intimidati­on in a country where women in politics are frowned upon. They also often lack the political clout and money to get nominated by the major parties.

Kenya, which heads to the polls in August, has East Africa’s lowest representa­tion of women in parliament at 19 per cent, compared to 61 per cent in Rwanda and 38 per cent in Ethiopia, the Geneva-based Internatio­nal Parliament­ary Union says.

Three previous attempts to get the bill passed have failed, with male lawmakers walking out of the chamber in May when it was time to vote.

Last week’s High Court ruling came after several rights groups sued Kenya’s parliament­ary speakers and attorney general for missing a 2016 deadline to implement the law.

“It is dishearten­ing that none of the political players is taking any action,” said Patricia Nyaundi, chief executive of the state-funded Kenya National Commission on Human Rights, one of the groups behind the case.

“One would hope that the president and the leader of opposition would prevail upon their members to enact the law,” she added.

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