Articles in Category: Women In the News

Four Women Win in Kuwaiti Elections

The first ever success of women candidates in a Kuwait election brought unexpected drama to the polls on May 16th.

The four women MPs are among 21 newcomers to the 50-seat National Assembly, with the high level of churn appearing to reflect voter discontent with the obstructive approach of parliament in recent times, which has led to repeated dissolutions and three elections in as many years.

Four female members of parliament (MPs) managed to break an all-male political barrier and successfully upstaged opponents who forcefully campaigned against female participation.

That all four hold PhDs, have a formidable reputation for professionalism and now represent a proportion of the population that makes up more than 54% of eligible voters, points to a radical shift in opinion across Kuwait’s once stratified society.

 

Aung San Suu Kyi to Stand Trial

aung_san_suu_kyi.jpgMyanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi will stand trial Monday for an incident in which an American allegedly swam across a lake and stayed for two days in her closely guarded residence, where she is under house arrest.

The southeast Asian country's military junta rarely allows visitors to see Suu Kyi, and foreigners are not allowed overnight stays in local households.

The government said the presence of the American, John William Yettaw, in the lakeside home violated the conditions of Suu Kyi's house arrest.

Suu Kyi on Thursday was taken to a prison compound near Yangon , where authorities set up a special room for her until the trial, said Nyan Win, spokesman for her National League for Democracy party.

If convicted, Suu Kyi could face three to five years in prison.

Wife-Slapping Not OK in Islam

dr.qanta.ahmed_by_cnn.jpgCNN.com just published a comprehensive commentary by Dr. Qanta Ahmed in response to the recent wife-slapping issue originally reported in Arab News.

Dr. Ahmed is an articulate, accomplished and stunningly beautiful Muslim woman who, like Queen Rania of Jordan, and Sheikha Lubna of the UAE, is undoubtedly an inspiration to women of all races, religions and nationalities around the world.

Here are excerpts of her eloquently written piece (link to the full article is at the end of the post):
There is no basis in Islamic theology to support domestic abuse of any kind and specifically none pertaining to the matter of a wife's spending pattern.

The stark abasement of Islam that such a puritanical, backward-thinking judge would exact by issuing ridiculous decisions invites special scorn from the royal camp.

While the focus of the West remains on the pervasive abbaya in the kingdom or the longstanding restriction on women driving cars in the nation's cities, uninformed outsiders fail to realize that many, many women operate unhindered by these "restrictions."

In my time working in Saudi Arabia as an intensive care specialist, I came to learn that for most Saudi women, the abbaya is not a tool of oppression but rather one of liberation.

Let us also not forget 40 percent of the wealth in Saudi Arabia is owned and controlled by women, and these women are frequently business owners and oftentimes themselves employers.

Women are encouraged by Islam to maintain independent assets, assets over which men have no right or recourse even within the sanctity of marriage.

For experienced kingdom watchers, it is exciting to see the outcry against the violation of human rights come from inside the kingdom, not merely from without.

Women and progressive Saudi men who support them are not silenced. In fact, as observant Muslims, they are enjoined by Islam to expose any injustice, even and, in fact, especially when the infraction is committed by Muslims themselves.

This act of stupidity unfairly depicts the kingdom as draconian at a time when the tides of progressive reform are now waist-deep and rising. Such narrow perspectives only serve to fuel global Islamophobia that has greatly increased in the West post-9/11.

Muslims around the world and within the kingdom can no longer tolerate this stance, and the king, the Custodian of the Two Holy Sites of Islam, isn't likely to, either.
Read the full article here on CNN.com

Related links:
Dr. Qanta Ahmed AWR Profile

Saudi Judge Says It's OK to Slap Wife

A Jeddah court judge’s approval of husbands slapping their wives on the face if they spend money lavishly on unnecessary things triggered a hue and cry during a seminar on domestic violence here recently.

“If a person gives SR1,200 to his wife and she spends SR900 to purchase an abaya (the black gown) from a brand shop and if her husband slaps her on the face as a reaction to her action, she deserves that punishment,” said Judge Hamad Al-Razine.

The judge made this comment in the presence of Princess Adila bint Abdullah, deputy chairperson of the National Family Safety Program, who attended the seminar on the role of judicial and security institutions in preventing domestic violence.
Arab News

Related links:
Wife-Slapping Not OK in Islam
Dr. Qanta Ahmed AWR Profile
Arab/Jew Duet & Two Trips Blog Post Get Mixed Reactions
Shhhh...Susan's in Saudi
LIVE4LA on Women in Saudi Arabia
Saudi Beauty Pageant Measures Morality