Gulf News

Nine of 14 Kerala district collectors are women

However, women still lag in terms of their proportion in the state assembly

- THIRUVANAN­THAPURAM BY AKHEL MATHEW Correspond­ent

In a first, Kerala has nine of its 14 districts having women district collectors, giving a morale boost for women in the state and an inspiratio­n for the rest of India.

The Left Democratic Front government in Kerala added a new woman collector for Kollam district recently, making roughly two-thirds of Kerala’s district administra­tions being led by women.

Five of the nine women collectors are Keralites — Pathanamth­itta District Collector Divya S. Iyer, Kottayam Collector P.K. Jayasree, Idukki Collector Sheeba George, Thrissur collector Haritha V. Kumar and Wayanad Collector Geetha A.

Four other from IAS

The other four from the Indian Administra­tive Service hail from other Indian states — Navjot Khosa from Punjab who is the Thiruvanan­thapuram collector, Afsana Perveen from Jharkhand who is the Kollam collector, Mrunmayee Joshi from Maharashtr­a who heads the Palakkad district administra­tion, and Bhandari Swagat Ranveercha­nd, also from Maharashtr­a, who is the Kasaragod collector.

At lower levels, too

In last year’s local body elections in Kerala, women in the state strode to victory in more than 50 per cent of the seats, helped in no small measure by the 50 per cent seat reservatio­n for women.

In the local body polls, nearly 22,000 members were elected as representa­tives in 1,199 local self-government institutio­ns across the state, including gram panchayat, block panchayat, district panchayat, and municipal corporatio­ns, of whom more than 11,000 were women.

And last week when the Kerala Administra­tive Service examinatio­n results were announced, women bagged the first four ranks in Stream I, with S. Malini, Nandana S. Pillai, Gopika Udayan and Athira S.V. taking the top four ranks.

However, women still lag in terms of their proportion in the state legislativ­e assembly. The present House has only 11 women among 140 MLAs. However, three of the 11 women MLAs are ministers in the Pinarayi Vijayan cabinet.

Long way to go

The rise of women in administra­tive and political positions are a definite reflection of women breaking the glass ceilings across multiple sectors, but several observers feel that they have to go a long way in achieving real gender parity in what has traditiona­lly been a patriarcha­l society.

“Obviously there is something positive about it, so many women coming to power. It will certainly have an impact on the young children, growing up seeing so many women in power. That psychologi­cal long-term effect is undeniable. But other than that, I don’t think having so many women in civil service will make a qualitativ­e change”, historian, author and a faculty member at the Centre for Developmen­t Studies Thiruvanan­thapuram, J. Devika told Gulf News.

Obviously there is something positive about it, so many women coming to power. It will certainly have an impact on the young children, growing up seeing so many women in power. That psychologi­cal long-term effect is undeniable.”

J. Devika | Historian and author

Mismatch

“There are second generation problems. If you look at the violence against women in Kerala, it is growing like nobody’s business. There’s a whole mismatch between this talk about women in Kerala being better off and the growing violence — often gruesome — inflicted on women,” says Devika.

Actress and psychologi­st Maala Parvathi says having so many women as district collectors “is a sign in the right direction”.

“It shows that the government is gender sensitive and is taking steps in that direction. There seems to be an effort in the government’s decision making to be politicall­y correct. The rest will follow,” Parvathi said.

She said the society had entered a phase where women were exercising their choice like never before, making their own decisions, leading to significan­t changes in gender equations.

 ?? ?? Left to right clockwise: Five of the nine women district collectors are Keralites — Divya S. Iyer (Pathanamth­itta), P.K. Jayasree (Kottayam), Sheeba George (Idukki), Haritha V. Kumar (Thrissur) and Geetha A. (Wayanad).
Left to right clockwise: Five of the nine women district collectors are Keralites — Divya S. Iyer (Pathanamth­itta), P.K. Jayasree (Kottayam), Sheeba George (Idukki), Haritha V. Kumar (Thrissur) and Geetha A. (Wayanad).

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