THU 14 - 8 - 2025
 
Date: May 18, 2012
Source: The Daily Star
Algerian women take a third of the seats in parliament

France Press

ALGIERS: Algeria’s legislative elections saw women take almost a third of the seats, making the national assembly the most gender-balanced in the region, but activists say the battle is far from won.
 
According to official results made public Wednesday, 143 of the enlarged national assembly’s 462 seats will be occupied by women, up from a representation of only 7 percent in the outgoing house.
 
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hailed “the high number of women elected” while U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon “welcomed the increased representation of women in the new parliament.”
 
The May 10 elections saw President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s National Liberation Front recover some of its past hegemony while Islamist parties lost ground, failing to ride the religious wave that followed the Arab Spring.
 
“The Arab Spring may be delayed for the Islamists but its flowers have blossomed for women, they will bring color to parliament and raise their voices in an assembly which was dominated by men for 50 years,” said Samia, an unemployed woman in her fifties, in central Algiers.
 
“With this considerable proportion of women in parliament, we’re closing in on true democratic representation in parliament,” said Fatima Mustapha, a university teacher.
 
Women account for 53 percent of the population, 45 percent of magistrates and now control around 32 percent of the national assembly, statistics which place Algeria ahead of Tunisia and Morocco.
 
Interior Minister Daho Ould Kablia boasted that the number of women elected last week also put Algeria ahead of the European Union average.
 
After 10 years of activism by women’s rights groups, a new law imposed parliamentary quotas of 20 to 50 percent of women, depending on the size of the constituency.
 
But feminists stress it remains to be seen how effectively the new women MPs, many of them inexperienced, will work together across party lines.
 
“Women now have to prove that they deserved their seats,” said Nadia Ait Zaid, a jurist who runs a center that campaigned for the quotas and trained some women candidates before the elections.
 
She said the two main issues that female lawmakers will have to tackle are a family code that still does not grant full equality to women and a bill criminalizing domestic violence.
 
Several male-dominated parties, including the ruling NLF, had initially resisted the quotas, arguing that some women who were lower than men on election party lists would get bumped up to meet the imposed requirement.
 
Several women’s rights activists also complained that some party leaders had named their wives and daughters at the bottom of their lists to pay lip service to the new equality rules.
 
“Whether it’s a man or a woman who gets elected doesn’t matter. What’s important is that the elections are fair, and they were not fair,” said Salima, a young woman wearing a traditional head-to-toe garment.
 
“A woman who wins thanks to a quota imposed by the law or thanks to fraud is not legitimate. The same goes for men.”

 



 
Readers Comments (0)
Add your comment

Enter the security code below*

 Can't read this? Try Another.
 
Related News
Algeria riots after activist jailed
Algeria opposition activist gets one-year suspended sentence
Algeria releases 4 protest leaders
Five jailed after banned Algeria demonstration
Oil prices, virus, instability put Algeria on edge
Related Articles
الحكومة الجزائرية: بقايا النظام السابق تحرض على الفوضى للعودة للحكم
Algeria: Sports win to economic success
The Arab Spring Is Not Returning to Algeria and Morocco
Algeria’s moment of truth; time for change or a bluff?
The military have made their move in Algeria and Sudan – but is there something the generals have missed?
Copyright 2025 . All rights reserved