Women currently hold just 23 percent of seats in Kenya’s parliament but that could change under a bill being debated Wednesday in Nairobi.
Kenyan lawmakers are considering a plan to allocate a third of all
seats in parliament to women. The bill’s supporters are optimistic it
would pass despite previous failures. If passed the measure would bring
women representation in Kenya’s government on a par with the global
average, but lower than neighbors Rwanda, Ethiopia and Burundi.
Gender experts say that a stronger women’s voice at the top would
have a trickle-down effect, they say, leading to the development of
policies and laws that would help women at the grassroots level fight
abuse, discrimination and inequality.
Since 2012, women’s rights groups in Kenya have fought to have
legislation passed and despite the supreme court directing parliament to
enact a law, previous attempts have failed largely due to quorum
hitches.
The bill has the backing of both President Uhuru Kenyatta and opposition leader Raila Odinga and its supporters say they are confident it will pass.
But it is not without opposition.
Critics said creating additional parliamentary seats would cost Kenyan taxpayers millions of dollars in extra salaries.
Others have questioned how nominations of candidates would be
conducted, suggesting that politician’s wives, girlfriends and
mistresses would be given seats by proxy.
Wilberforce Oundo from the opposition Orange Democratic Movement said
it would be “extremely difficult to trust the process of nomination”.
“The executive, women activists and rights campaigners and must
invest heavily in the capacity building of women, instead of looking for
short-term gains and short-term escapes,” he told parliament.
Kenya’s 2010 constitution states that no more than two-thirds of any
elected or appointed political bodies can be of the same gender, but
does not set out a mechanism for attaining that goal.
The new legislation proposed by MP Aden Bare Duale provides for
special seats to be created if parliamentary elections fail to achieve
the required numbers, with female candidates nominated to fill them.
“We want to fix the historical injustices done to women in the past.
And for us to do that, we need to empower the women of this country,”
said the ruling Jubilee party representative as he presented the bill in
the national assembly.
“We must give them the seat of leadership. Women must be present at
the decision-making table – in the executive, in the legislature, in the
judiciary and in the private sector.”
Kenya’s economy has grown on average by 5 percent annually over the
last decade, but the benefits have not been equally shared – and women
and girls remain disadvantaged socially, economically and politically.
Women make up only a third of the 2.5 million people employed in the
formal sector, says the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics. And while
women provide 80 percent of Kenya’s farm labor, they own only 1 percent of agricultural land.
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