Tuesday, March 25, 2008

MNS online Stroy

Kashmiri women venturing into politics
Monday, September 24, 200714:33 IST

Jammu: Having suffered hugely from years of relentless violence, women in Jammu and Kashmir are fast taking to politics to fight for their rights.
Women, they say, are not represented adequately and not much is being done for them in a state where families, particularly girls and women, have borne the brunt of suffering since insurgency began in 1989. By joining politics they want a space in the decision-making process, they say.
For years after independence, Begum Akbar Jehan, also known as "Madr-e-Mehraban", wife of legendary Kashmiri leader Sheikh Mohammed Abdullah, was an iconic figure in Kashmiri politics.
In 1996, another Kashmiri woman,
Mehboob Mufti made a mark. She was among the two women elected to the legislative assembly along with Sakina Ittoo, daughter of a National Conference leader.
But it was Mehbooba who took centre-stage, despite the fact that Ittoo was a minister in the National Conference government. Mehbooba overshadowed even her male rivals by her articulation and especially by highlighting the human rights issues and the plight of women in Kashmir."I have learnt everything from my father, but the women found a special relationship with me," she observes in her interviews.
Darakhshan Andrabi, who holds a doctorate and is an Urdu poet, has also made it to politics under the banner of her party, Socialistic Democratic Party. Hers is a greater challenge. "I talk pro-people and I am a nationalist," she says.
Andrabi, always dressed in white, pursues a vibrant pro-India line in the Kashmir valley, where her views are considered a taboo. She is the one who challenges the secessionists, their ways, means and agenda.
"What have they given to the people", she asks and answers: "Death and destruction."
She has already declared her intention to field 30 candidates in the assembly elections, due next year.
As more women are coming to head political parties, and several others are making it to key positions in political groups, educated women are quitting their jobs and joining politics.

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