New Delhi, Mar 31 (ANI): Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee has called for an all-party meeting over the Women”s Reservation Bill on April 5 before it is tabled in the upcoming session of the Parliament.
Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati has called for countrywide protests against the Bill next month, saying that the legislation was against Dalit icon Bhim Rao Ambedkar”s ideology of empowering women from all sections of society.
Mayawati-led Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) has planned to hold the protests at the tehsil level and has asked its leaders to educate people about the ”flaws” in the Bill.
Mayawati has said the BSP is not against the reservation, but wants a sub-quota for the women from the weaker sections of society.
Union Law Minister Veerappa Moily on Tuesday said that the government would seek to get the Women”s Reservation Bill passed in the Lok Sabha during the second half of the current session of Parliament, which re-convenes on April 15.
Moily, however, denied that there would be changes in the Bill.
The Bill has been strongly opposed by the Yadav trio- Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Lalu Prasad Yadav, Samajwadi Party (SP) chief Mulayam Singh Yadav and Janata Dal-United (JD-U) supreme Sharad Yadav, who have been demanding a quota within quota for women from backward communities and minorities.
Both Lalu Yadav and Sharad Yadav have threatened to withdraw support from the government if the Bill is passed in its present form.
Mulayam Singh Yadav had earlier made sexist remarks over the Bill saying “men would whistle at women parliamentarians coming through quota”, asserting that he purposefully made these remarks so as to stir up a debate over the Women”s Reservation Bill, which he claimed would only benefit women related to industrialists and bureaucrats.
The controversial yet historic Women”s Reservation Bill seeks to provide 33 percent reservation for women in Parliament and in state legislative bodies. (ANI)
US model Shanna Moakler stands up for gay marriage
Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): American model Shanna Moakler has decided to make it very clear that she was “hurt and upset” by first runner up in Miss USA 2009 pageant Carrie Prejean’s comment about gay and lesbian marriage.
Moakler, 34, was upset by Prejean saying that a “marriage should be between a man and a woman”, and she has decided to make a stand for what she believed in – the right for gay and lesbian couples to marry.
The model was in North Hollywood on April 28 with co-executive state pageant director Keith Lewis as they prepared Miss USA 2006 first runner-up Tamiko Nash and last year’s Miss California Raquel Beezley to shoot a NO H8 Campaign.
The campaign hopes to raise awareness and eventually have Proposition 8 over-turned in California.
“It’s important for us right now to participate in this, especially given the conversation surrounding Miss California. We’re here showing we’re a family, we agree to disagree and support our beliefs,” Fox News quoted Lewis as saying, as Moakler nodded in agreement.
“It’s been a difficult time but we want to show that there are a lot of different families, I was raised by a single mom, and I am dad to two children that are being raised by two moms. Can’t we all just love each other and get along and celebrate the fact that people are able to find true love?
“We are working through it; we’re a family in resolution. We really want to give Carrie an opportunity to express her beliefs, the Miss California system is about empowering women to be strong and independent and stand up for whatever they believe in.
“So as soon as Carrie is done explaining her beliefs we really look forward to her coming back to our platform. I’m proud that she was able to stand there and utter whatever it was that came out of her mouth. I’m a 45-year-old man and I don’t think I could explain myself to millions of people,” he added. (ANI)