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<BODY bgColor=#ffffff>Kabul,4/9/2003 (IRIN) - As tentative steps are taken
towards nation<BR>building in Afghanistan, women are calling for full
participation in the<BR>formulation of the nation's new constitution.<BR><BR>"If
we have a good constitution but we cannot implement it in a good way,<BR>this
means the country will not go in the right direction," Afghan Women's<BR>Affairs
Minister Habiba Surabi told IRIN on Tuesday at a meeting on women<BR>and
constitutional reform in the Afghan capital, Kabul. "The newly
drafted<BR>constitution is taking women into consideration, but my concern is on
its<BR>implementation," she said.<BR><BR>Surabi called for rapid efforts towards
bringing about disarmament and<BR>setting up a national army as prerequisites to
the successful<BR>implementation of the new constitution. However, she pointed
out that<BR>there was a lack of knowledge on what a constitution is and of how
people,<BR>particularly women, could benefit and be properly protected by
it.<BR><BR>According to Mahbooba Hoqooqmal, the minister of state for
women's<BR>affairs, Afghan women have been suffering from two substantial
problems.<BR>"Women's illiteracy rate is much more higher than [that of]
men,"<BR>Hoqooqmal, who is also the government's adviser with 35 years
experience<BR>in judicial affairs, told IRIN. The second problem was that "we
have<BR>witnessed that in many cases courts have not taken a fair decision
on<BR>women as [opposed] to men", she said, adding that the country needed
to<BR>establish legal and judicial centres for women, where they could
obtain<BR>and help towards gaining their legal rights.<BR><BR>Hoqooqmal urged
the constitutional commission to focus on mother and child<BR>health, inasmuch
as the country has one of the highest maternal mortality<BR>rates in the world.
"The new constitution should consider social and<BR>health insurance for women,
if not now but at least for the future," she<BR>said. "We have always had good
laws on paper, but this time we want them<BR>to be implemented," she
added.<BR><BR>Currently, Afghanistan operates by the 1964 constitution. Under
the Bonn<BR>Agreement, a constitution drafting commission was established last
October<BR>by the Afghan transitional government. The commission has prepared a
first<BR>draft to be to be presented to a constitutional commission, which
will<BR>finalise the draft and submit it to the Constitutional Loya Jirga,
or<BR>grand tribal assembly by August 2003.<BR><BR>The Afghan government told
IRIN that the constitution-making process was<BR>incorporating women's needs and
rights. "It is well understood that for<BR>this constitution to be truly
representative of the people of Afghanistan,<BR>it cannot exclude over half of
the population," Farooq Wardak, the<BR>director of the constitutional
commission's secretariat, said, noting that<BR>women had a key role to play in
the constitution-making process.<BR><BR>The current Afghan constitution-making
process has support from the UN and<BR>donor agencies, and the role of women in
it is a top priority,<BR>representatives say. "The UN agency in one or another
way is involved in<BR>the rehabilitation and reconstruction process of postwar
Afghanistan, and<BR>women's participation is on the top of the agenda,"
Najia Zewari, a<BR>programme officer with the UN Development Fund for
Women (UNIFEM), told<BR>IRIN, calling on all involved agencies to assist women
to realise their<BR>rights.<BR><BR></BODY></HTML>