North
African women at forefront of legal reform
Women
in North Africa, particularly from the Maghreb
region, have taken some impressive strides in their struggle for equality,
says Fatima Sadiqi.
WOMEN
in North Africa have made tremendous
progress in promoting and upholding their rights. Women in the region
commonly known as the Maghreb are at
the forefront of the Arab world in terms of individual rights and gender
equality, and constitute models for other Arab women to follow. A number
of lessons may be drawn from the inspiring experience of women in North
Africa, especially in Morocco
and Tunisia.
Access
to justice has been greatly facilitated by the new Family Courts in
Morocco as necessitated by the Moroccan
Family Code of 2004. When women marry, they are now able to retain ownership
of their property thanks to Article 49 of the code, which allows for
a separate contract on property alongside the marriage contract. This
is in accordance with Islamic law, in which women may remain the sole
owners of their property and have no legal obligation to share it with
their husbands.
In
addition, mothers married to foreign nationals in Morocco
and Tunisia
can now pass on their citizenship to their children - a privilege previously
allowed only to men.
The
countries of the Maghreb have made
significant headway in combating violence against women. Almost all
Arab countries have signed the most important international convention
that bans such violence, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), with exceptions to articles
that clashed with a literal interpretation of the Islamic law. But Morocco has recently agreed to the
convention in full.
Women
are also more visible in economic and academic spheres than before in
the Maghreb. Nationwide youth literacy
is gradually becoming a reality, with women demanding accessible and
standardised educational opportunities. And women often spearhead business
ventures, are increasingly choosing their professions freely and feeling
safer at the workplace as a result of laws that combat sexual harassment,
and have better access to clinics and more independence in making decisions
about their reproductive health.
Fertility
rates have dropped considerably in the region, from well above six children
per woman in the 1970s to approximately two per woman in Morocco,
Tunisia and Algeria,
according to the Journal of African and Asian Studies. This reduction
is impressive: the Maghreb accomplished in 25 years what took almost
200 years in France.
Women
in the Maghreb have also progressed when it comes to exercising their
political rights and civic voice, with more and more women becoming
members of their nations' parliaments (43 in Tunisia, 34 in Morocco
and 30 in Algeria) and local governing councils (no less than 3,406
in Morocco).
Non-governmental
organisations have played an essential role in pushing women's rights
forward in the Maghreb region. Networking between associations at national
and grassroots levels ensures that activists can disseminate information
and rally multiple groups to help promote new legislation or initiatives
that help women.
Support
networks, such as Anaruz, a network of Moroccan women's associations,
are getting stronger despite the society's conservative social norms.
Women's rights organisations and individual activists have helped the
government to improve the rights of all women, which the state sees
as a way to improve society as a whole.
Another
lesson that the Moroccan and Tunisian experiences offer is the importance
of the place given to gender and women studies in some universities.
These academic programmes have proved instrumental in changing social
perceptions, attitudes and structures that obstruct gender equality.
One
of the main reasons for the slow progress in women's rights in the rest
of the Arab world is an unfounded fear among conservatives that granting
full equality to women constitutes an imposition of Western values and
a deviation from Islamic norms. Proponents of women's rights in the
Maghreb, however, have made every effort
in their thinking and action to show that it is patriarchy and social
norms, and not Islam itself, that constitute the roots of their problems.
Women's
rights are indeed congruent with the spirit of Islam and with universal
ideals. Islamic jurisprudence has a tradition of ijtihad - an independent
and contextual interpretation of the Qur'an and hadith, the sayings
of the Prophet Muhammad - which allows consideration of culture as a
changing concept.
The
countries of the Maghreb strive to
reinterpret Islam in modern social contexts through their revised family
codes, which secure women's rights without compromising Islamic values.
Tradition and modernity are not lived as mutually exclusive. The future
of women's rights in the Maghreb greatly
depends both on the work of civil society activists and continued Islamic
legal reform based on universal human rights. - Common Ground News Service
(CGNews)
Fatima
Sadiqi (www.fatimasadiqi.on.ma) is a professor of linguistics and gender
studies and a UN expert on gender.
*Third
World Resurgence No. 233, January 2010, pp 38-39
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