Order Code RL32376
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Women in Iraq:
Background and Issues
for U.S. Policy
Updated March 13, 2006
Aaron D. Pina
Analyst in Middle East Religions and Cultures
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜
The Library of Congress
Women in Iraq:
Background and Issues for U.S. Policy
Summary
The issue of women’s rights in Iraq has taken on new relevance, following the
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, efforts to reconstruct Iraq, and recent elections for
a Transitional National Assembly (TNA). Over the past three years, the Bush
Administration has reiterated its interest in ensuring that Iraqi women participate in
politics and ongoing reconstruction efforts in Iraq. There has also been a widening
debate regarding the extent to which the U.S.-led reconstruction efforts have been
able to enhance women’s rights in Iraq and encourage their participation in Iraq’s
governing institutions.
According to some observers, political uncertainty, conservative Iraqi culture,
and an increase in popular religious activism, has called into question the future
involvement of Iraqi women in nation-building and their role in public life. Also,
Iraqis, in general, and Iraqi women, in particular, have complained that the volatile
security situation and continuing insurgency have contributed to a deterioration in
their status. Others note that Iraqi women are making inroads into the political
process, citing the example of the January 30, 2005 national election, which resulted
in Iraqi women gaining 87 out of 275 seats in the TNA. While Iraqi women captured
31% of Assembly seats, a primary challenge will be the drafting of a new permanent
constitution, which some feel must institutionalize the rights of women as equal
citizens in the state of Iraq. Another challenge Iraqi policymakers face is how to best
ensure Iraqi women are represented in traditionally male-dominated areas such as the
judiciary, state ministries, and local government.
The U.S. commitment to Iraqi women’s issues has evolved into greater
programming for women in Iraq. As part of the approximately $21 billion in U.S.
funding for Iraqi reconstruction in FY2004, the United States allocated substantial
amounts that specifically help Iraqi women with democratic organization, education,
advocacy, and entrepreneurship. Still, U.S.-sponsored Iraqi reconstruction projects
that address women’s issues face challenges. Although women may benefit from a
range of reconstruction and humanitarian programs, elements of Iraqi civil society
and culture continue to undervalue the role of women in areas such as political
participation and private industry. Furthermore, issues of personal status, like
polygamy, continue to hamper gender equality in Iraq.
Related CRS papers include CRS Report RL33227,
U.S. Assistance to Women
in Afghanistan and Iraq: Challenges and Issues for Congress, by Rhoda Margesson
and Daniel Kronenfeld; CRS Report RL31339,
Iraq: U.S. Regime Change Efforts
and Post-Saddam Governance, by Kenneth Katzman; and CRS Report RL31833,
Iraq: Recent Developments in Reconstruction Assistance, by Curt Tarnoff. This
report will be updated as events warrant.
Contents
Women under Baathist Rule (1968-2003) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Education and Labor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Women and the Government . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Deterioration of the Social and Economic Situation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Deterioration of the Legal Situation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Women in Post-Saddam Iraq
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Governance Under the Coalition Provisional Authority (2003) . . . . . . . . . . 6
Iraqi Governing Council (IGC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Women’s Rights Under the IGC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Women and the Transition to Iraqi Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Current Situation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Elections & New Government . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Women’s Rights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Issues for the United States: Past & Present . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Religious & Cultural Forces Within Iraq . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Threats to Reconstruction Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
U.S. Programs For Women in Iraq . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Overview of Reconstruction Programs for Iraqi Women . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
U.S. Activities for Iraqi Women . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Womens Democracy Initiative (WDI) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
The National Endowment for Democracy (NED) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
National Democratic Institute (NDI) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
The International Republican Institute (IRI) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
The United States Institute of Peace (USIP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Congressional Activity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Women in Iraq:
Background and Issues for U.S. Policy
The issue of women’s rights in Iraq has taken on new relevance, following the
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, efforts to reconstruct Iraq, and recent elections for
a Transitional National Assembly (TNA). One of the major questions facing U.S.
policymakers is the extent to which the United States can help Iraqi women
reintegrate into the political, educational, and economic spheres after a long period
of decline, exacerbated by three major wars and more than a decade of economic
sanctions. Advancing the political and social position of women and committing
adequate resources to girls’ education have both been linked to the achievement of
efficient and stable development, particularly in post-conflict regions.
Congress has taken an active interest in the issue of women in Iraq over the past
few years. Since March 2004, several congressional Members have participated in
the Iraqi Women’s Caucus, with the intention of improving Iraqi women’s lives and
supporting women to gain access to educational and professional opportunities. S.
2144, a bill introduced in the 108th Congress as the Foreign Affairs Authorization Act
FY2005, included a section expressing the “sense of Congress that the rights of
women in Iraq, including their full participation in government and society, should
be protected following the transfer of sovereignty to Iraq in June 2004.” Another bill,
H.Res. 143 (also introduced in the 108th Congress), resolved that Congress encourage
ongoing programs designed to support Iraqi women to participate more fully in a
democratic Iraq.
No specific earmarks for women’s programs have been passed in the current
Congress. The Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs
Appropriations Act, 2006 (H.R. 3057, P.L. 109-102), provides $28 million each to
the International Republican Institute and the National Democratic Institute to fund
governance and rule of law programs in Iraq. The earlier version of this bill as passed
in the Senate had specified that the funding should be spent in the areas of
“governance, elections, political parties, civil society, and women’s rights,” but the
mention of women was not included in the final conference report.
The first section of this report provides an overview of Iraqi women’s situation
under Baathist rule (1968-2003). The second section discusses the position of
women in the immediate post-Hussein period, examining the role of the Coalition
Provisional Authority (CPA). The third section examines the current situation of
Iraqi women, recent elections, and the impact the Transitional National Assembly
(TNA) has upon women. A fourth section outlines significant issues affecting U.S.
policies toward Iraqi women, highlighting the possible outcomes of a volatile security
situation, indigenous challenges to women’s rights (like the rise of Islamic
conservatism), and of the transition to Iraqi sovereignty. A final section highlights
key U.S.-sponsored programs that address Iraqi women’s issues.
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Women under Baathist Rule (1968-2003)
Under the relatively secular Baathist regime, which espoused a variant of Arab
socialism, women enjoyed certain legal privileges and opportunities that were
deemed, by many observers, to be more progressive than in other countries in the
Middle East. In practice, however, many Iraqi women faced various forms of
discrimination and mistreatment. Although Iraqi women experienced significant
legal gains, their public role was often restricted. During the 1990s the restrictions
became more evident as women were often manipulated by the Hussein-dominated
Baathist regime for political aims.
Education and Labor
In the 1970s and 1980s, Iraqi oil wealth financed a massive social sector
expansion, helping build the public service, health, and educational sectors. As part
of its program to improve economic development in the country, the secular Baathist
government made education compulsory for boys and girls until the age of 16. The
Compulsory Education Law, passed in 1976, allowed for primary school attendance
to become nearly universal by the beginning of the 1990s when it reached 93%.1
Some scholars argue that in addition to economic motivations, the Baathist regime
supported girls’ education as part of a deliberate policy to weaken tribal influence.
The move challenged the existing kinship structure inherent in Iraqi society, a
cultural system that historically looked unfavorably on any public role for political
participation by women. The regime, according to one source, “made it a policy to
end women’s isolation from the public sphere through education, work, unionization,
and women’s associations.”2
Whether for economic or social reasons, the prominence of Iraqi women in the
workforce during the Baathist years was, at least intermittently, an important policy
objective. This was especially the case during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, when
female labor was needed in order to fill the economic vacuum created by the large-
scale mobilization of male breadwinners. The special demands on the Iraqi economy
during and after the Iran-Iraq war, according to a United Nations report, led to
increases in women’s industrial employment, from 13% in 1987 to 21% in 1993.3
By 1993, female employees constituted 79% of the services sector, 43.9% of the
professional and technical sectors, and 12.7% in administrative and organizational
posts. At the same time, women suffered the consequences of political repression,
a characteristic of Iraqi society as a whole during this period. Moreover, despite gains
in employment, thousands of widowed women were forced to become the sole
household caretakers and to deal with the impact of a decade-long war that imposed
an emotional and physical burden on a large sector of the population.
1
Iraq Living Conditions Survey, United Nations Development Program, 2005.
2 Shereen T. Ismael, “Dismantling the Iraqi Social Fabric: From Dictatorship Through
Sanctions to Occupation,”
Journal of Comparative Family Studies 35 (2004).
3
Iraq Living Conditions Survey, op. cit.
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Women and the Government
In 1972, in line with the party’s attempt to consolidate civil institutions under
state control, the Baathists formed the General Federation of Iraqi Women (GFIW),
also known as the Iraqi Women’s Federation.4 The GFIW became the only legally
sanctioned women’s organization in Iraq. Despite the existence of the GFIW as part
of the Baathist state, the participation of Iraqis, in general, and of women, in
particular, within the national political discourse was fairly limited. Some sources
argue that in reality, men ran the state apparatus and filled most of the senior
management positions as Iraq remained a largely patriarchal and tribal-based society.5
Others argue that there were some women in the Baathist Regional Command (the
most senior body within the Party).
According to a 2003 conference report on women’s role in post-conflict Iraq,
the GFIW organization was originally conceived to “ensure that regulations regarding
women were complemented by capacity-building and literacy programs, and to
sponsor educational programs on women’s legal rights.”6 Some hypothesize that
during his presidency (1979-2003) Saddam Hussein came to support the GFIW,
seeing it as a way to break old familial and tribal allegiances while redirecting them
towards a Baathist and nationalist focus.7 Some estimates indicate that in 1997, 47%
of all women in Iraq belonged to the GFIW.8 Other sources provide a more modest
estimate, noting that in the late 1990s, the GFIW had a reported membership of 1.5
million women, in 222 branches across Iraq.
Overall, analysts maintain that the GFIW became “a strong force in
implementing women’s legal claims to land, and assuring them access to education”;
it also promoted women’s rights to marry and divorce, and in exchange, many
women “supported the [Baath] Party just as their leader wished.”9 Yet, throughout
the 1990s, Saddam Hussein’s government restricted the activities and rights that the
GFIW secured for Iraqi women. In particular, as the Iraqi economy constricted in the
late 1990s, the government pushed women out of the labor force and into more
4 For general historical information on the GFIW, see Suad Joseph, “Elite Strategies for
State-Building: Women, Family, Religion and State in Iraq and Lebanon,” in
Women, Islam
and the State, 1992.
5 Daniel Henninger, “Muslim Women Seize Chance To Claim Rights,”
The Wall Street
Journal, March 11, 2005.
6
Building a New Iraq,
op. cit.
7 Swanee Hunt and Cristina Posa, “Iraq’s Excluded Women,”
Foreign Policy 40, July 2004.
8 “Background on Women’s Status in Iraq Prior to the Fall of the Saddam Hussein
Government,”
Human Rights Watch Briefing Paper, November 2003. Available online at
[http://www.hrw.org/backgrounder/wrd/iraq-women.htm].
9 Elizabeth Fernea, “The Challenge for Middle Eastern Women in the 21st Century,”
The
Middle East Journal 54(2000)
CRS-4
traditional domestic roles, to accommodate increased employment opportunities for
Iraqi men.10
For example, the under-representation of women in the highest ranks of the
Baathist regime is noted by a 1998 report published by the United Nations Children’s
Fund (UNICEF).11 The report also indicates that the proportion of women in Iraqi’s
National Assembly had declined from a high in 1984 of 13.2% to 10.8% in 1990.
Moreover, although there were legal provisions guaranteeing women’s right to run
as candidates of Iraqi political parties for local “Popular Councils,” the report
concludes that these guarantees “did not result in equitable representation in these
political institutions.”12
Deterioration of the Social and Economic Situation
A number of analysts believe that, for multiple reasons, the position of women
in Iraqi society rapidly deteriorated following the 1991 Gulf War and the imposition
of United Nations economic sanctions (1990-2003). Economic, social, and political
restrictions placed extreme strains upon women. While there were no official
statistics published on the rate of illiteracy among women, a trend of decreasing
literacy was being reported by the Iraqi government during the 1990s. In 2000, the
United Nations estimates that adult illiteracy among Iraqi women was approximately
45%, an increase in illiteracy from a reported 25% in 1987.13
The economic decline was also coupled with a decline in the quality of public
education sector. In some cases, young girls were required to share in domestic
responsibilities and to assist their families by earning informal wages, thus curbing
their school attendance.14 Women endured other hardships under the strict political
regime of Saddam Hussein; according to a U.S. Department of State Fact Sheet,
Hussein’s regime utilized sexual assault and torture to terrorize dissidents and to
elicit confessions from female prisoners.15
10 Available online at [http://www.hrw.org/backgrounder/wrd/iraq-women.htm]. The report
states that in 1998, the Iraqi government reportedly dismissed all females working as
secretaries in governmental agencies. In June 2000, it also reportedly enacted a law
requiring all state ministries to put restrictions on women working outside the home. For
more on the changing nature of the role of Iraqi women see, “Saddam Bans Iraqi Women
from Work,” available online at [http://www.iraqfoundation.org].
11 “Situation Analysis of Children and Women in Iraq,” United Nations Children’s Fund
(UNICEF/IRAQ), April 30, 1998.
12
Ibid.
13 Compare with the year 2000 statistics for Egypt (33.4%), Morocco (38.2%), and Syria
(11.7%). See “Indicators on Illiteracy,” United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO), [http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/social/illiteracy.htm].
The 1987 statistic was reported by UNESCO and cited by Human Rights Watch,
“Background on Women’s Status in Iraq,”
op. cit.
14
Ibid.
15 “Life Under Saddam Hussein: Past Repression and Atrocities by Saddam Hussein’s
(continued...)
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It appears that the position of Kurdish women in northern Iraq was somewhat
different from the rest of the country during this period. Between 1991 and 2003, the
Kurdish region was largely autonomous, protected by a “no-fly-zone” enforced by
U.S., British, and French warplanes. Some argue that as a result, Kurdish-Iraqi
women were in a better situation than their counterparts, allowing them to be
involved in the Kurdistan Regional Government and to form women’s organizations
and networks that sought greater political and public participation of women.16
However, in the more traditional and tribal parts of Kurdistan, the custom of “honor
killings” persisted. One news report indicates that this custom might be gradually
eroding in the Kurdish areas following recent interventions by dozens of non-
governmental organizations (NGO’s). 17
Deterioration of the Legal Situation
The 1970 Iraqi Constitution issued by the Baathist regime declared equal rights
for all Iraqis, regardless of sex, race, language, social origin, or religion. In 1980,
Law No. 55 granted women the right to be nominated to the Iraqi National Assembly.
Labor laws also required equal pay, benefits, and promotions for men and women.
For the most part, the personal status laws in Baathist Iraq were based on the 1959
Code of Personal Status, which drew on various sources including Islamic law,
customary law, and judicial precedence. Under this Code, polygamy was permitted
only with the consent of the Muslim courts in Iraq. Compulsory marriage was
punishable by law. A wife was entitled to request dissolution of her marriage if her
husband did not “fulfi1 any lawful condition stipulated in [a] marriage contract.”18
In practice, these laws were often not enforced. After the Iran-Iraq war ended
in 1988, some sources indicate that a man could divorce his wife without paying
compensation.19 In the 1990s, the legal situation of Iraqi women began to deteriorate
further. In 1990, as part of an effort to gain support from Iraq’s tribal leaders and
religious fundamentalists, Saddam Hussein introduced Article 111 into the Iraqi
penal code. This law exempted men from punishment for the practice of “honor
killings,” that is if they killed female relatives who had committed or been involved
in perceived sexual improprieties (even if these women were raped). Some reports
suggest that Hussein also allowed the observance of a strict interpretation of
shari’a
15 (...continued)
Regime,” April 4, 2003. Available online at [http://www.state.gov/p/nea/rls/19675.htm].
16
Building a New Iraq,
op. cit.
17 A survey commissioned by the Kurdish Women’s Union discovered that “382 women
[were] known to have been murdered by their families between 1998 and 2002 in the
northern half of Kurdish Iraq.” See Nicholas Birch, “Efforts pay off to protect Kurdish
women,”
Christian Science Monitor, March 3, 2004.
18 Iraqi constitution available online at [http://www.law.emory.edu/IFL/legal/iraq.htm].
19 Graham Usher, “Mother Iraq,”
Al-Ahram Weekly, 26 February-3 March 2004.
CRS-6
(Islamic) law, which called for the stoning death of women as a form of punishment
for adultery.20
Women in Post-Saddam Iraq
Governance Under the Coalition Provisional Authority (2003)
The Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) was established approximately one
month after United States and coalition forces took control of Baghdad, Iraq on April
9, 2003. The authority’s mission was “to restore conditions of security and stability,
to create conditions in which the Iraqi people can freely determine their own political
future, and facilitating economic recovery, sustainable reconstruction and
development.”21 Since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the formation of the
CPA, the Bush Administration has stated its interest in ensuring that Iraqi women are
involved in rebuilding and reconstruction efforts in Iraq. An August 2003 “Fact
Sheet” issued by the Department of State indicated that:
The U.S. is committed to helping the Iraqi people transition to a sovereign,
representative form of government that respects human rights, rejects terrorism
and maintains Iraq’s territorial integrity without threatening its neighbors. We
recognize that the women of Iraq have a critical role to play in the revival of their
country and we strongly support their efforts. They bring skills and knowledge
that will be vital to restoring Iraq to its rightful place in the region and in the
world. The U.S. will engage with Iraqi women to secure and advance the gains
that they have achieved so far.22
From the start of the occupation, the Administration indicated that the CPA
would work to advance women’s rights in Iraq. A prominent Kurdish-Iraqi woman,
Nasreen Barwai, was made Minister of Public Works within the interim government.
Since the establishment of the CPA, there has been a widening debate regarding the
extent to which the CPA was able to assist women in Iraq and to incorporate them
in the reconstruction effort.
Iraqi Governing Council (IGC)
In July 2003, the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority, headed by proconsul
L. Paul Bremer, unveiled the 25-member Iraqi Governing Council (IGC). Three
members of the IGC were women and one of them, Akila al-Hashimi, was
assassinated in September 2003. She was replaced by another woman, Salama
al-Khufaji, who joined the other female appointees Rajaa Khuzai and Songul
Chapouk. Chapouk is an ethnic Turkoman and a Sunni Muslim, while Khuzai and
20
Building a New Iraq,
op. cit.
21 The U.S. dissolved the CPA on June 9, 2004. Coalition Provisional Authority and Iraqi
Governing Council, The November 15 Agreement: Timeline to a Sovereign, Democratic and
Secure Iraq, available online at [http://iraqcoalition.org/government/AgreementNov15.pdf.].
22 “U.S. Policy on Iraqi Women’s Political, Economic, and Social Participation,” August
7, 2003. Available online at [http://www.state.gov./g/wi/rls/22492.htm].
CRS-7
al-Khufaji are ethnically Arab and Shi’i Muslims. Khuzai is a physician who headed
a maternity hospital in the southern city of Diwaniyah. Al-Khufaji is from the Shi’a
city of Karbala and was a professor of dentistry at Baghdad University. Chapouk was
a teacher of fine arts in the northern city of Mosul and had previously worked for
women’s causes.
In 2003, some observers argued that Iraqi women did not have an adequate
presence in the Iraqi ministries and in the judicial infrastructure.23 In December
2003, Khuzai and Chapouk enunciated their frustrations with the CPA, writing that
“women are severely under represented in the leadership established for the
transition”; they asserted that, “as plans for a new governing structure are developed,
the Iraqi Governing Council and the Coalition Provisional Authority should ensure
women their rightful place at the decision-making table.”24 This criticism, as some
observers have noted, highlights one of the challenges facing U.S. officials working
to include Iraqi women in all levels of the government.
Prior to the formation of the IGC Bremer reportedly promised that the IGC
would include a wide spectrum of Iraqis and would not be dominated by exiles.25 As
a result, one of the problems in appointing local Iraqi women lay in identifying
experienced women, who had remained in Iraq but were not affiliated with the
Baathist regime, to work within the interim government. As part of its “de-
Baathification” policy, the CPA abolished the GFIW, which had been the only
officially recognized organization for women under Baathist rule. After its collapse,
some of the GFIW’s top leaders, who had been most closely affiliated with the
Saddam Hussein regime, reportedly fled Iraq out of fear of arrest and (or)
prosecution.26
Women’s Rights Under the IGC. On December 29, 2003, the U.S.-
appointed IGC passed Resolution 137, which would have overruled the Iraqi Family
Law that has been in effect since 1959. Resolution 137 would have placed several
aspects of family law, including matters of marriage, divorce, and inheritance, under
Islamic law. It was reported that “the conservatives’ power might cause a problem
in the future, especially when we will start debating women’s rights.”27 Following
protests led by women’s groups and pressure by administrator Bremer, the IGC
cancelled this resolution.
Despite the concern over women’s constitutional rights, there were no Iraqi
women on the nine-member committee drafting the Transitional Administrative Law
23 One report indicates that there less than 10% of Iraq’s judges are women. See Amnesty
International’s Report,
Iraq: Decades of Suffering, February 22, 2005.
24 Raja Habib Khuzai and Songul Chapouk, “Iraq’s Women are Ready to Lead Absent
Voices,”
New York Times, December 4, 2003.
25 Rajiv Chandrasekaran, “U.S. Sidelines Exiles who were to Govern Iraq,”
Washington
Post, June 8, 2003.
26 “De-Baathification of Iraqi Society,” Coalition Provisional Authority Order No. 1, May
16, 2003. Available online at [http://www.cpa-iraq.org/regulations/CPAORD1.pdf].
27 “Women in Parliament Want Islam in Iraq Law,”
Associated Press, April 16, 2005.
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(TAL), which was signed by the IGC on March 8, 2004. The TAL is serving as
Iraq’s interim constitution at least until October 2005, when a permanent constitution
is scheduled to be put to a referendum. The TAL declares equal rights for all Iraqis
regardless of gender, ethnicity, religion, or nationality. It considers the Islamic
religion as a source of law; also, no provision in the TAL can violate Islamic
principles. The TAL also contains a provision calling for a targeted goal of 25%
representation for women in the transitional National Assembly.28 It is unclear
whether this provision will remain in effect after a permanent constitution is ratified.
Critics of the TAL have listed several concerns with provisions dealing with
women’s rights. They suggest that the TAL “offers no explicit guarantee that women
will have equal rights to marry, within marriage, and at its dissolution; It does not
explicitly guarantee women the right to inherit on an equal basis with men; It fails to
guarantee Iraqi women married to non-Iraqis the right to confer citizenship to their
children.”29 Proponents of the TAL point out that in 1990, women constituted less
than 11% of Iraq’s National Assembly, and that the 25% targeted goal would more
than double this proportion. They also note that 25% exceeds the number of women
represented in the United States Congress and that the TAL is the only Arabic-
language constitution clearly indicating that “gender-specific language,” that is
language written in the more commonly used Arabic masculine form, “shall apply
equally to male and female.”30
Women and the Transition to Iraqi Rule
The handover of limited sovereignty to Iraqis took place on June 28, 2004. The
Administration’s plans to hand over sovereignty placed strict limits on the new Iraqi
government, including only partial command over its armed forces and no authority
to enact new laws. The transitional government currently being formed has
somewhat expanded prerogatives. In the long run, however, what is of major concern
to proponents of women’s rights is whether any future Iraqi government would
maintain or enforce those constitutional provisions that support the rights of Iraqi
women. It appears that the biggest challenge to Iraqi women will be seeking to voice
their opinions and play a meaningful role in a future government.
Some regarded the exclusion of Iraqi women in the writing of the TAL as a
worrisome sign for the future, raising the question of whether women will be
involved in the writing of a permanent constitution. On May 10, the National
Assembly appointed a 55-member committee to begin drafting the permanent
constitution, which is scheduled to be completed by August 15, 2005, in time for an
28 “Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period, 8 March 2004,”
Available online at [http://www.cpa-iraq.org/government/TAL.html].
29 “Interim Constitution Shortchanges Women,”
Human Rights Watch, March 5, 2004.
Available online at [http://www.occupationwatch.org/article.php?id=3503].
30 “Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period, 8 March 2004,”
op. cit.
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October 15, 2005 referendum.31 Although there is no law that stipulates women must
have representation on the constitutional assembly, 9 seats are currently held by
women. Also, NGO’s that address the concerns of Iraqi women are “among the
groups that are organizing on the constitution the most,” ensuring that women’s
issues continue to gain attention.32
Other questions have been raised about the enforcement of current and future
laws that provide equality for women. Even if a future Iraqi constitution contains
progressive provisions for women’s rights, some analysts are concerned that
implementation of progressive legislation may prove difficult. The issue of
supporting newly elected Iraqi women and preparing Iraqi women for future
elections is of near-term relevance, as is the question of how women’s rights will be
affected if religious conservatives are given greater voice in a new Iraqi government.
Moreover, some proponents have argued that in order to ensure that women are
well-integrated in the nation-building process, their role in rebuilding the Iraqi
economy must be institutionalized through support for equal access to economic and
financial resources.
Current Situation
Elections & New Government
The United States transferred limited sovereignty to an interim Iraqi government
on June 28, 2004, with a new government and a permanent constitution to be voted
on later. In June 2004, the United Nations formed an 8-member Independent
Electoral Commission of Iraq (IECI), nominated by leading Iraqi notables, to assist
in the election of a 275-seat National Assembly, a provincial assembly in each of
Iraq’s 18 provinces (41 seats each and 51 for Baghdad), and a Kurdistan regional
assembly (111 seats). The elections were provided for in the TAL, and took place
on January 30, 2005.33 Under IECI rules, every third position on electoral lists
contained a woman’s name. This calculus developed in response to the TAL’s goal
for at least 25% female membership in the new Iraqi National Assembly. For many
Iraqi women and outside observers, the elections results have been mixed. Iraqi
women exceeded the baseline of 25% Assembly membership to make up nearly 31%
of the Assembly (or 86 out of 275 seats). The winning Shi’i list, backed by the
prominent Iraqi cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, has 46 women in its block of 140
seats.34
31 See CRS Report RL31339,
Iraq: U.S. Regime Change Efforts and Post-Saddam
Governance, by Kenneth Katzman.
32 Manal Omar, “Women’s Rights in a New Iraq: The Constitution and the Future,” Council
on Foreign Relations Roundtable on Women and U.S. Foreign Policy, May 11, 2005.
33 Full text of the Transitional Assistance Law available online at [http://www.cpa-iraq.org/
government/TAL.html]. See also CRS Report RS21968,
Iraq: Elections and New
Government, by Kenneth Katzman.
34 Joelle Bassoul, “Iraq Women Set to Take Almost Third of Seats in New Parliament,”
(continued...)
CRS-10
Women’s Rights
The Prime Minister of Iraq, Ibrahim al-Jaafari (a Shi’a), stated that he supports
women’s rights, including the right to become President or Prime Minister.35
Furthermore, there is widespread hope, among Iraqi women’s groups, that a new
constitution will continue to stipulate wide-ranging, liberal rights for Iraqi women.
Yet, there are some who caution against the belief that women are virtually
guaranteed gender equality in the civil and legal spheres of Iraqi society. Narmin
Othman, Minister of State for Iraqi Women’s Affairs, recently voiced concerns about
the Shi’i dominated Assembly, stating that:
We need to guarantee women’s rights in our constitution. This will be a huge
challenge. And to be honest with you, I’m aware there are some in Iraq who
would like to limit women’s rights. In the election and National Assembly, we
have more than 150 Islamists, Shi’i, maybe they are believing that Sharia
[Islamic law] is the biggest or one of the biggest resources for the constitution,
that means limiting women’s rights.36
The issue of Islam’s place in many Middle Eastern and predominantly Muslim
nations’ legal codes is common and Iraq is no exception. Although modern Iraqi
history is replete with liberal views towards women, Iraqi Shi’ism and the wider
culture of the country may create obstacles for women increasing their participation
and visibility in Iraqi political and social life. In particular, some analysts are
concerned that any new Iraqi constitution may mirror the “cosmetic” rights Saddam
Hussein extended to women during his regime. These experts note that a Shi’i
dominated Iraqi political system will face challenges from secular Iraqis with regards
to persistent social issues such as honor killings, harassment, polygamy, and property
ownership.
It remains unclear whether personal status issues, like divorce, will be addressed
from a secular-civil perspective or fall under the purview of Islamic law. A wider
concern relates to participation. Many observers hail the representation of women
in the Iraqi National Assembly as a positive development, while others note that
women continue to lack leadership opportunities in local provincial, mayoral, and
town posts. These critics argue that women hold no top positions in any of Iraq’s 18
governorates or judiciaries.
34 (...continued)
Agence France Presse, February 14, 2005.
35 Charles Osgood, “Iraqi Women Fear Setbacks in Civil Rights Because New National
Assembly is Predominantly Shi’i,”
The Osgood File, February 16, 2005.
36 Phillip Kurata, “World Support Urged for Women’s Rights in Iraq, Afghanistan,”
Washington File, March 9, 2005.
CRS-11
Issues for the United States:
Past & Present
Overview
The Bush Administration has continued to assert that the position of Iraqi
women has improved following the U.S. toppling of the Saddam Hussein regime.
In a speech on March 12, 2004, President Bush indicated that “every woman in Iraq
is better off because the rape rooms and torture chambers of Saddam Hussein are
forever closed.”37 Nonetheless, a number of concerns have been raised over the past
year regarding the role of women in a future Iraq and the status of U.S. efforts to
promote women’s rights. Overall, the concern for many is that any modest political
gains Iraqi women have secured may be threatened by cultural forces and increased
political authority of Shi’i conservatism. Also, the question of equal representation
for women in local governance and the judiciary may continue to resonate, despite
any increases in the parliament. Furthermore, the continuing violence in Iraq affects
“at-risk” populations like women, who often restrict themselves to their homes out
of fear of physical harm, intimidation, and abuse.
Security
A number of security concerns affect not only the involvement of women in the
developing Iraqi political system but also the access of ordinary Iraqi women to
reconstruction programs. Some report that many Iraqi women who work to advance
political freedoms, do so under threat of violence, extortion, and kidnappings. The
lack of security has been cited as a major obstacle in the progress of reconstruction
efforts aimed at advancing women’s rights.
A delegation of Iraqi women visiting the United States in early March 2004
indicated that progress on women’s rights in Iraq was continuously threatened by a
precarious security situation and the rise of Islamic factions. One analyst wrote in
2004 that since the start of the occupation, “life has not returned to ‘normal’ in Iraq.
In places where kidnappings occur frequently, children must be accompanied to
schools and women are escorted to the market and have taken to donning abaya
(body-covering garments) to ensure greater self-protection.”38
With increased violence directed toward women involved in Iraqi reconstruction
and government, it appears that “many large international aid groups, including most
of those with women’s programs, have already withdrawn international staff because
of attacks against aid workers. Now the few remaining Iraqi women’s groups fear
37 “President, Mrs. Bush Mark Progress in Global Women’s Human Rights,” March 12,
2004, [http://www.whithouse.gov/news/releases/2004/03/20040312-5.html].
38 Anita Sharma, “Women in Iraq: Between Fear and Freedom,” March 12, 2004,
[http://www.open democracy.net/debates/articles/-2-951776.jsp].
CRS-12
they will be next.”39 In late March 2004, gunmen opened fire on a convoy carrying
Iraq’s female Minister of Public Works Nisreen Berwari, who escaped unharmed. On
March 9, 2004, Fern Holland, a 33-year old lawyer and former Capitol Hill staffer
from Oklahoma, was murdered, along with her deputy Salwa Ourmashi and CPA
press officer Robert Zangas. Holland worked with the CPA, as the women’s rights
coordinator in Shi’a-dominated areas within southern Iraq. On November 20, 2004,
Amal al-Ma’amalchi, a women’s rights activist and advisor at the Iraqi Ministry of
Municipalities and Public Affairs, was killed in Baghdad. Al-Ma’amalchi was a
co-founder of the Advisory Committee for Women’s Affairs in Iraq and the
Independent Iraqi Women’s Assembly. On April 27, 2005, Lamia Abed Khadouri,
a Member of Parliament, was killed in her home.
Religious & Cultural Forces Within Iraq
Religious and cultural factors in Iraq might also present challenges to
reconstruction efforts targeting women. For example, there is a debate over the
extent that Islamic law or
shari’a should play a role in a future Iraqi government. As
discussed above, some Iraqi groups — including those represented on the
U.S.-appointed Governing Council — are interested in instituting Islamic courts
instead of civil courts to oversee matters related to marriage, divorce, property
ownership, and inheritance. These courts would be run by Muslim clerics - all of
whom are male.
Some analysts are concerned that the growing religious conservatism within
Iraqi society is threatening women who are liberal, secularist, and non-Muslim or
those Muslim women who do not wish to be ruled by a religious-based law. There
is also concern among Kurdish-Iraqi women’s groups who feel that the strides made
during years of relative autonomy (1990-2003) could be threatened by the inclusion
of the Kurdish areas in what could become an Islamist-governed Iraqi state. Many
Iraqi women, including Christian female students in strongly Shi’a Basra, Iraq, have
complained that they have been forced to wear a head scarf. Other Iraqi women’s
groups, however, point out that Islamic law is not inherently contrary to the rights of
women. A Baghdad-based group called the Islamic Women’s Movement notes that
“Islamic scriptures accord women considerable rights — inheriting property, for
example, or declining an unwanted husband. They say it’s the way male authorities
interpret those writings that keeps women from exercising them,” adding that
teaching women their rights under Islam would help end injustices against them.40
Some recent studies indicate a degree of indigenous resistance to women’s
involvement in governance or to equal rights for women, particularly in the more
traditional and Shi’i-dominated region of southern Iraq. One study of southern Iraq
indicated that most Iraqi men and women do not fully support women’s civil and
political rights, “including freedom to move about in public and to participate in
39 Annia Ciezadlo, “After an Advocate’s Killing,”
Christian Science Monitor, April 1, 2004.
40 Annia Ciezadlo, “A Religious Awakening,”
Newsday, February 19, 2004.
CRS-13
government.”41 The study mentions that “lack of support for such rights for women
may be related to implementation considerations, such as inadequate numbers of
teachers, employment opportunities, and safety issues, among others.”42 This may
not reflect the opinion of Iraqis towards women in other regions of Iraq. Women in
the northern Kurdish region, as discussed above, have experienced greater freedom
and more opportunities for political involvement in the past several years. The
attitude of Iraqis towards women in larger urban centers, such as Baghdad, has yet
to be fully investigated and might also reflect a range of opinions on women’s rights.
Threats to Reconstruction Programs
It is difficult to generalize about the status of the reconstruction programs in
Iraq, because the country’s political and social landscape is diverse. However, some
assessments of U.S. reconstruction programs have called into question the extent to
which USAID programs have been effective in improving the lives of Iraqi women,
especially considering the uncertain security situation. One recent report by
Christian Aid, a UK and Ireland-based charity, indicated that poverty in Iraq,
particularly among women and children, has been exacerbated by “the insurgency,
military action, crime, and ethnic and religious conflict.”43 The survey states that in
parts of Baghdad,
children’s education is being severely disrupted. Almost two-thirds of school-age
children in the families surveyed were not attending school full time. The reasons
given included persistent violence, poor standards of education, dilapidated
school buildings and children forced to work to boost family income.44
A poll conducted by the Institute for Civil Society Studies, an Iraqi NGO,
indicated that serious security concerns have hindered women’s access to health care
facilities. The problem is especially visible in southern Iraq, in the Shi’i-majority city
of Basra, where many women have suffered from the long-term effects of war,
beginning with the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, and are in desperate need of medical
care. Some analysts have observed that Iraqi insurgent attacks have increasingly
targeted civilians including employees working on reconstruction projects. Despite
this trend, according to USAID and NGO, several reconstruction programs are still
fully operational and continue to serve the needs of many Iraqis, including women
and children. In some cases, while many foreign NGO workers may have left Iraq,
the NGO offices themselves have continued to operate with the help of newly-trained
Iraqi staffers.
41 Lynne Amowitz,
et al., “Human Rights Abuses and Concerns About Women’s Health and
Human Rights in Southern Iraq,”
Journal of the American Medical Association 291 (2004).
42
Ibid.
43 “Christian Aid in Iraq,”
Christian Aid, March 2005. Online at [http://www.christian-
aid.org.uk/world/where/meeca/iraqp.htm].
44
Ibid.
CRS-14
U.S. Programs For Women in Iraq
Background
Both Congress and the Bush Administration have placed special emphasis on
assisting women in Iraq. In conference report language (H.Rept. 108-337),
accompanying the FY2004 Emergency Supplemental Appropriation (P.L. 108-106),
which provided $18.4 billion for Iraqi reconstruction, conferees included $10 million
“to support womens programs” in Iraq. In February 2004, former Deputy Secretary
of Defense Paul Wolfowitz announced that “the United States is giving special
emphasis to helping Iraqi women achieve greater equality and has allocated $27
million for womens programs.” He added that “education for women is one of the
highest priorities, and the United States has committed more than $86.8 million to
education projects, with special emphasis on ensuring that girls are registered and
attending school.”45
In March 2004, then-Secretary of State Colin Powell announced a $10 million
Iraqi Womens Democracy Initiative (WDI), intended to “train Iraqi women in the
skills and practices of democratic public life. Programs will include education for
democracy, leadership and political advocacy workshops, entrepreneurship projects,
media training for women aspiring to careers in journalism, and activities to help
non-governmental organizations build capacity.”46 The Secretary also announced the
formation of a “U.S.-Iraq Womens Network” (USIWN). Iraqi womens issues and
womens programs have also received an indeterminable amount of funding through
other Iraqi reconstruction funds, targeting women in education, local governance,
health care, and civil society. More recently, Secretary of State Rice reiterated the
U.S. position on women in Iraq, stating that:
U.S. Government-sponsored programs are helping Iraqi women develop in
diverse areas from literacy, computer, and vocational training to human rights
education. Micro-credit facilities and workshops are helping aspiring Iraqi
businesswomen, and additional funds are improving womens access to quality
health care, including maternal and child health.47
Since 2004, the United States has supported democracy-building programs that
help Iraqi women candidates learn democratic organization and advocacy skills,
including post-election reform strategies for Iraqi women. Though FY2005 regular
and supplemental appropriations did not specify new amounts of aid for women, a
significant amount of funds support activities benefitting women and girls [see
below].
45 Women in the New Iraq,” February 1, 2004. Online at [http://www.defenselink.mil/
speeches/2004/sp20040201-depsecdef0844.html].
46 “Secretary of State Colin L. Powell To Announce Iraqi Womens Democracy Initiative
and Creation of the U.S.-Iraq Womens Network,” March 8, 2004, Available online at
[http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2004/30223.htm].
47 “U.S. Commitment to Women in Iraq,” Office of the Senior Coordinator for
International Womens Issues, March 8, 2005. Online at [http://www.state.gov/g/wi/rls/
42512.htm].
CRS-15
Overview of Reconstruction Programs for Iraqi Women
Since April 2003, USAID has implemented a number of programs for women
in governance. Some of these initiatives have been managed under the auspices of
the Iraq Local Governance Program (LGP), a program intended to provide a
foundation for Iraqs transition to democracy. According to the Research Triangle
Institute (RTI International), which has been contracted to work in this sector, the
LGP has attempted to deal with the obstacles presented by Iraqi culture to women in
governance. The Iraqi Women in Local Governance Group (IWLGG) has been
established in order to “enhance the political participation of women through civic
education and training and monitoring the progress of female participation in each
local government.”48
The LGP also supports and funds initiatives by local women’s groups to develop
their own NGOs, civil society organizations, and professional associations. A major
component of the project, according to USAID, is to facilitate the participation of
women in city councils. Through this program, USAID has held a number of
workshops for women throughout Iraq, specifically in cities such as Arbil, Hillah,
Karbala, and Baghdad. At these conferences, “international and local participants
discuss issues such as Islam, democracy, oppression of women, womens rights and
participation in future elections.”49
USAID has supported accelerated learning programs that are specifically
targeted toward girls’ education. These programs are intended to provide girls with
life skills and the academic background necessary to return to formal schooling. A
USAID report discussing reconstruction accomplishments in March 2004, indicates
that USAID has rehabilitated 2,351 schools and trained over 32,000 teachers and
education administrative workers. The report indicates that these efforts, “have
resulted in children returning to school. Notably, female attendance has surpassed
male attendance, and overall attendance during exam week was 97 percent.”50
In trying to encourage the work of NGOs in Iraq, the CPA worked with USAID
in order to build the organizational capacity of NGOs targeting women through
training and other assistance programs. Some U.S.-based NGOs have conducted
workshops for women and worked with Iraqi womens organizations on womens
rights awareness and skills training. For example, Women for Women International,
a U.S.-based NGO, is supporting the development of an NGO community in Iraq and
has partnered with agencies and other groups to develop a number of womens centers
throughout the country, some of which will provide leadership workshops as well as
vocational skills training.51
48 Information provided to CRS by the Research Triangle Institute, March 2004.
49
Ibid.
50 “USAID accomplishments in Iraq Mar 2003 to Mar 2004,” March 18, 2004. Online at
[http://wwww.reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf/s/CEC16D9F9A47731085256E5C0056EE14].
51 Women for Women International, [http://www.womenforwomen.org/owiraq.html].
CRS-16
U.S. Activities for Iraqi Women
Womens Democracy Initiative (WDI). Given the relatively new experience
of Iraqi women in governance, U.S. programs, like the Womens Democracy Initiative
(WDI), target womens participation in the emerging Iraqi democratic political arena.
The WDI provides financial and technical support for political party training,
grassroots advocacy, and womens political rights. In December 2004, the WDI
sponsored a Womens Candidate Training seminar in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq. The
Seminar introduced female Assembly candidates to voter registration and campaign
methods. WDI also targets civil society projects like training female radio
broadcasters to produce and run a daily womens show. The WDI also established the
Womens Leadership Institute, which assists Iraqi women to rise to positions of
authority in Iraqi government and civil society.
The National Endowment for Democracy (NED). NED supports
projects in Iraq that target the capacity of human rights and womens grassroots,
NGO, and political organizations by facilitating civic participation, party
development, and coalition building. Specifically, the NED provides technical
assistance to promote understanding of Iraqs past and the possible future of
democratic culture in the country. Recently, the NED sponsored the Iraq Memory
Foundation (IMF), which supports a web-based womens rights memorial. The NED
also lent strategic support to female Assembly candidate training in voter targeting
and contact strategies, and womens leadership.
National Democratic Institute (NDI). NDI provides technical assistance
in support of political participation of Iraqi women. Recognizing the particular
challenges Iraqi women face in the public sphere, NDI supports grass-roots projects
that assess the needs of Iraqi womens’ political participation. Specifically, NDIs
program to strengthen womens political participation in Iraq is designed to foster an
environment in which women are viewed as credible and effective leaders. The
Institute works with political parties and civil society organizations to develop
concrete strategies for including women in political structures. NDI also continues
to build a network for women political activists that provides a forum for assistance
across party lines and gives women the skills to present themselves as professional
and competitive candidates.
The International Republican Institute (IRI). The IRI provides technical
assistance and advice on campaign training, coalition building, and polling. IRI
sponsored a “Stop the Violence” campaign in August 2004, which brought together
a coalition of Iraqi women from throughout the country to conduct a door-to-door
signature campaign that denounced violence. Their efforts led to a meeting with
interim Iraqi Defense Minister Hazem Sha’alan and President Ghazi al-Yawar, who
both committed to making that matter a priority. Since that time, the IRI established
a permanent management structure to register Iraqi NGOs committed to decreasing
inter-communal violence.
The United States Institute of Peace (USIP). The Institutes work with
Iraqi women is placed within the broader context of civil society, inclusion, and
tolerance. Part of USIPs programming in Iraq supports civil society organizations
that increase the participation of Iraqi women in public life (women and conflict
CRS-17
resolution, constitution making, and inter-ethnic dialogue). Recently, USIP awarded
a grant to an Iraqi civil society organization for activities including a workshop on
inter-communal tolerance for Sunni and Shi’i mothers. USIP also provided training
for 1,151 Iraqi women on political participation, elections mechanisms, and conflict
resolution.
Congressional Activity
Congress has taken an active interest in the issue of women in Iraq over the past
two years. Since March 2004, some Members of Congress have participated the Iraqi
Womens Caucus, with the intention of improving Iraqi womens lives and supporting
women to gain access to educational and professional opportunities. S. 2144, a bill
introduced in the 108th Congress as the Foreign Affairs Authorization Act
FY2005,
included a section stating the “sense of Congress that the rights of women in Iraq,
including their full participation in government and society, should be protected
following the transfer of sovereignty to Iraq in June 2004.” Another bill, H.Res. 143
(also introduced in the 108th Congress) resolved that the Congress encourage ongoing
programs designed to support Iraqi women to participate more fully in a democratic
Iraq.
Although the Senate report on the FY2006 Department of State appropriation
request (S.Rept. 109-35) recommends establishing a Middle East Foundation, which,
in part, “expands the rights of women” in countries such as Iraq, no specific earmarks
for women’s programs have been passed in the current Congress. The Foreign
Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2006 (H.R.
3057, P.L. 109-102), provides $28 million each to the International Republican
Institute and the National Democratic Institute to fund governance and rule of law
programs in Iraq. The earlier version of this bill as passed in the Senate had specified
that the funding should be spent in the areas of “governance, elections, political
parties, civil society, and women’s rights,” but the mention of women was not
included in the final conference report. In addition, two congressional resolutions
emerged in this session encouraging the Iraqi Transitional National Assembly to
adopt a constitution granting women equal rights (H.Res. 383 and S.Res. 231, both
passed unanimously). A third resolution commended Iraqi women candidates in the
January 2005 elections (H.Res. 143, referred to the Subcommittee on Middle East
and Central Asia).