Why Are Women Shut Out of Egypt’s Constitutional Committee?

February 25, 2011 | by

Sixty-three Egyptian organizations have decried the absence of women on Egypt’s Constitutional Committee, the body tasked with ensuring rights and proposing amendments to the country’s constitution. In a petition signed last week, the groups said that a committee without a single female legal expert—of which there are many in Egypt—“triggers fears and suspicions with regards to the future of Egypt” after the January 25 revolution.

This raises a key question about “the main aims of the revolution which were initially spelled out as equality, freedom, democracy, and participation of all citizens,” the groups said. Women “have the right to participate in building the new Egyptian state.”

The petition also questions the selection criteria of Constitutional Committee members and says that women participated equally in the revolution and that some of them have been jailed.

Read the petition in English on the website of the Egyptian Center for Women's Rights.

3 Comments to “Why Are Women Shut Out of Egypt’s Constitutional Committee?”

  1. Just like the army, the presence of women in certain functions seem to be not reflective of the quantitative realities.

    The suggested amendments opens the door for women to compete for the presidency.

    This should be interesting to watch ;)

  2. Why are women being shut out of Egypt's Constitutional Committee? What an excellent question! Considering the critical role that young, educated Egyptian women played in the peaceful revolution unfolding in Egypt, one suspects that too much of the old guard continues to hold sway to the detriment of the people. Will share.

  3. BTW, when trying to access I discovered that the petition link is broken. I dropped the page a note via 'contact' to give the heads-up.

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Hanan Rabbani

Hanan Rabbani is Senior Program Officer, Women’s Rights & Gender Development, Open Society Middle East and North Africa Initiative.

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