Indian media laud success of women's quota bill
March 11, 2010 00:00:00
Michael Sik Yuen, Mauritian Minister of Tourism (second from left) and Majid Al Mualla, Emirates' Senior Vice President, Commercial Operations (extreme left) signing an agreement on behalf of their respective sides in Dubai Sunday. Under the deal Emirates
NEW DELHI, Mar 10 (AFP): Indian newspapers Wednesday hailed a vote by legislators to reserve one-third of parliamentary seats for women after a debate that saw unruly protests and the suspension of several MPs.
Sonia Gandhi, the matriarch of national politics, said she was "happy for all the women of the country" after the upper house passed the bill, which now heads to the lower house where more furious opposition is expected.
Regional socialist parties have campaigned against the law since it was first proposed 14 years ago, saying it would benefit only elite Hindus unless there were specific quotas for Muslim and low-caste women.
"Women Go From Home to House" ran the headline in The Times of India, which like other dailies described the vote as a major breakthrough for women's rights.
"It is no secret that patriarchy runs deep in Indian society and women have been historically denied social, economic and political opportunities," the Times said in its editorial.
The bill has threatened to split the Congress-led coalition that won last year's elections but party president Gandhi, who has invested political capital in the policy, said she was committed to seeing it pass into law.
Meanwhile, Sonia Gandhi, the matriarch of Indian politics, said she was "happy for all the women of the country" after the upper house passed a bill that would reserve a third of parliament's seats for women.
Gandhi, president of the ruling Congress party and widow of former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, said in television interviews broadcast Wednesday that she was "very relieved" at the vote.