Pranab Mukherjee calls for all-party meeting over Women”s Reservation Bill

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)

Asia-Pacific region has one of the world’s worst gender gaps: UNDP

New Delhi, Mar.8 (ANI): While Asia and the Pacific can take pride in the region’s vibrant economic transformation in recent decades, this has not translated into progress on gender equality.

Discrimination and neglect are threatening women’s very survival in the Asia-Pacific region, where women suffer from some of the world’s lowest rates of political representation, employment and property ownership. Their lack of participation is also depressing economic growth.

Those were some of the findings of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)-sponsored 2010 Asia-Pacific Human Development Report launched today.

“Empowering women is vital for achieving development goals overall, and for boosting economic growth and sustainable development,” said UNDP Administrator Helen Clark, in presenting the Report: Power, Voice and Rights: A Turning Point for Gender Equality in Asia and the Pacific, here today. “Policy needs to advance gender equality, so that women as well as men can benefit from job creation and investments in social infrastructure.”

The Report focuses on three key areas —economic power, political decision-making and legal rights? to analyse what holds women back, and how policies and attitudes can be changed to foster a climb toward gender equality. Asia, the Report asserts, is standing at a cross-road and by putting the right policies in place now, countries in the region can achieve positive change.

Lack of women’s participation in the workforce costs the region billions of dollars every year. In countries such as India, Indonesia and Malaysia conservative estimates show that GDP would increase by up to 2-4 percent annually if women’s employment rates were raised to 70 percent, closer to the rate of many developed countries.

Fewer women than men are in paid work in every country in the region, with striking contrasts between South Asia and East Asia. Nearly 70 percent of East Asian women are in paid work, well above the global average of 53 percent, in countries such as Cambodia, China, and Viet Nam, for example. In South Asian countries like India and Pakistan fewer than 35 percent of women do paid work. These contrasts in women’s paid work between East and South Asia co-exist in parallel with the higher long-term growth trend of the former.

Despite laws guaranteeing equal pay for equal work, women in this region still earn considerably less than men, with the pay gap ranging from 54 to 90 percent. Women “consistently end up with some of the worst, most poorly-paid jobs —often the ones that men don’t want to do, or that are assumed to be “naturally” suited to women,” the Report found.

South Asia often comes in second worst in the world in gender equality measures, just above sub-Saharan Africa, while East Asia often fares better in health, education, and employment.

Asia-Pacific women hold only a handful of legislative seats, fewer than anywhere else in the world except in the Arab region. Women in Asia-Pacific rarely make it to elective office. The Pacific sub-region accounts for four of the world’s six countries without any women lawmakers.

Development level doesn’t necessarily correlate with high political participation for women, either; women in Japan and the Republic of Korea, for example, hold just 10 percent of legislative seats.

Interestingly, countries emerging from conflict appear to offer better political opportunities for women: 33 percent of Nepal’s parliamentarians are women, and nearly 30 percent of Timor-Leste’s.

The problem of “missing girls” ?in which more boys are born than girls, as girl fetuses are presumably aborted, and women die from health and nutrition neglect— is actually growing. Birth gender disparity is greatest in East Asia, where 119 boys are born for every 100 girls.

China and India together account more than 85 million of the nearly 100 million “missing” women estimated to have died from discriminatory treatment in health care, nutrition access or pure neglect ?or because they were never born in the first place, the report found.

A tenth of women here report being assaulted by their partners, and a majority of women who do work —up to 85 percent of South Asia’s working women? are engaged in unstable low-end work in the informal economy.

Few women hold property. Although women predominate in agriculture, they head only 7 percent of farms, compared to 20 percent in most other regions of the world.

“Pervasive gender inequality remains a barrier to progress, justice and social stability, and deprives the region of a significant source of human potential,” the Report concluded.

Laws aren’t helping much. The region is far behind where it could be on basic issues, such as protecting women from violence, upholding entitlements to property —even allowing people to divorce in an informed and reasonable way.

Few countries have adopted or implemented laws prohibiting violence against women, despite widespread evidence of discrimination and assault. Nearly half of the countries in South Asia, and more than 60 percent of those in the Pacific, have no laws against domestic violence. Nor are there many provisions against sexual harassment in workplaces, though 30 to 40 percent of working women report experiencing verbal, physical or sexual abuse.

“Too often, customs or religious beliefs have become a rationale for laws and legal systems to ignore or soft-peddle or even, in the worst cases, justify issues such as discriminatory inheritance practices and the multiple forms of violence that specifically target women,” Anuradha Rajivan, leader of the multinational team that prepared the Report, said.

Many women are also prevented from accessing justice if it involves challenging their husbands, other family members or the broader status quo, the report concluded.

The report has recommended the following steps for redressing the gender imbalance. They are as follows:

.Removing barriers to women’s ownership of assets, such as land; expanding paid employment; making migration safe and investing in high-quality education and health are some of the main solutions recommended for addressing these problems.

.Reforming constitutions, training judicial and law enforcement personnel in gender-sensitive practices and progressively
.Interpreting religious principles ?which recognize the equal value of all human beings.

.Political quotas to increase women’s political participation, with sanctions for non-compliance, could be necessary.

.More women should also be enfranchised into party politics; and relied upon as brokers of peace in times of emergency. (ANI)

Cabinet approves 50 percent reservation for women in panchayats

New Delhi, Aug 27 (ANI): The Union Cabinet on Thursday approved fifty percent reservation for women in panchayats all across the country.

“The Cabinet has approved the amendment of Article 243 (d) of the Constitution to reserve 50 per cent of the total number of seats in panchayats filled by direct election for women,” said Information and Broadcasting Minister Ambika Soni here after a Cabinet meeting chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

The states which have already implemented 50 per cent reservation for women in panchayati raj institutions are Bihar, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh.

While Rajasthan has announced implementation of the proposal in the next panchayat election in 2010, Kerala recently declared that it would implement it.

The 33 per cent reservation for women in panchayats was achieved through the 73rd Constitutional Amendment during the regime of Prime Minister P V Narasimha Rao, though it was Rajiv Gandhi who first mooted the idea of empowering women at the grassroots. (ANI)

‘Franchise business in India set to grow’

Kolkata, May 28 (IANS) The franchise business industry in India is hopeful of high growth in the coming years despite the global economic downturn, an industry representative said here Thursday.

“The franchise business in India has huge potential and we think it will grow to a large extent in next five years,” Indian Franchise Association (IFA) executive director Upendra Sachdev told IANS on the sidelines of a seminar.

“We can see the franchise industry growing in India, even during these times of recession and lay-offs. With the property rates lowering due to the slowdown, the entrepreneurs can now start franchise business with cheaper investment,” he added.

In the next five years, there would be at least 50,000 franchises in the Indian market, which would create an employment for at least 500,000 people,” Sachdev said.

The IFA and Young FICCI Ladies Organisation jointly held a one-day seminar, ‘Empowering Women Entrepreneurs Through Franchising’, in Kolkata to help understand the youngsters about the technical aspects of owning a franchise business as a successful carrier option.

“The franchise business has been very good mainly in food and beverage and education sectors. The food and beverage

industry was up by nearly 38 percent while the education sector registered a growth of 32 percent last year,” said

Sachdev.

He added that the industry expected a good response from the service and health sectors this year.

“Many foreign companies are also showing interest in the Indian market, which is definitely a good sign for our industry,” Sachdev said.

IFA is presently associated with a number of foreign nations like South Arabia, China, Thailand and Oman, where it is working to help Indian franchises to go and run their business successfully.

“Many Indian brands are growing in the Gulf countries but most of them are not doing very well in the European market,”

Sachdev said.

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)

Tibetans coming to terms with women Buddhist masters

Kathmandu, April 13 (IANS) The 800-year-old Tibetan Drukpa lineage of Buddhism – based in Nepal and practised in Bhutan and India – is empowering women, reviving the ancient tradition of women masters and monks that the Buddha encouraged.

Its head, the 12th Gyalwang Drukpa, has set a precedent by giving the order to its first ever woman master.

‘In Tibetan Buddhism, we have no tradition of ‘bikshunis’ or women monks who practise the rigours of the faith and become masters on a par with men. But Buddhism is a very modern religion,’ the 12th Gyalwang Drukpa, who was born in Himachal Pradesh, told IANS in the Nepal capital.

‘Buddha Sakyamuni (Gautam Buddha) treated his disciples equally, irrespective of gender.

‘We are bringing the liberal gender order of Sakyamuni back despite protests by some Tibetan Buddhists that it is not right,’ said the spiritual leader.

In March 2008, the 12th Gyalwang Drukpa enthroned a London-born Buddhist nun Tenzin Palmo, recognising her as Jetsunma or ‘his venerable holiness’ for her spiritual achievements.

She came to India in 1964 to study Buddhism. There she met her guru, the Kyabje Khamtrul Rinpoche, and became one of the first European-born women to be ordained a nun. Palmo now heads the Dongyu Gatsal Ling nunnery in Himachal Pradesh.

‘I am very proud of Tenzin Palmo and I am encouraging her to bestow on us her lineage so that we can work together to bring the tradition back,’ the 12th Gyalwang Drukpa said.

He lamented that the Buddhist sects over the past few hundred years had ceased to allow women the freedom to speak on anything fearing that it would bequeath them power.

‘I don’t blame anyone. The male-dominated culture of our folds had made the masters conservative, which include the Dalai Lama and I. But connecting to people is good and beautiful and is in no way below dignity,’ he said.

The Drukpa nuns most often cannot be distinguished from their male counterparts in terms of their attire and religious practices, he said. Both have shaven heads and are clad in burgundy and saffron habits.

A high profile woman member of the Drukpa women’s wing is 20-year-old erstwhile Chinese princess Jigme Cheneing Khandro from Nancheng province in China. She gave up her life of luxury to become a nun at the age of 12. It is an uncanny throwback to the life of Gautama Buddha himself.

But she protests with a nervous laugh. ‘Please don’t compare my life with that of Sakyamuni,’ she said here.

The 40th in the 200-year-old line of royal scions, Jigme wants to help people in this life and get enlightened gradually. ‘It may not happen in this life,’ she said.

Her day at the monastery begins at 3 a.m. ‘I pray for two hours from 3 a.m.-5 a.m. and then recite the ‘sutras’ (mantras). It is followed by activities throughout the day till sundown,’ Jigme Cheneing said.

The Gyalwang Drukpa encourages the nuns to serve his order ‘and work in the office’.

‘I often tell them to drive cars to bring bring them on the same level with men. Last year, I invited the nuns to perform the traditional masked dance at my monastery in Ladakh.

‘Everyone was shocked at the idea of women dancing with masks. But I said I was breaking boundaries – they are all man made – Chinese made, Tibetan made and Indian made…,’ the Buddhist master said.

The India-born Drukpa head has nearly 400 women nuns in his lineage. One of the managers at the nunnery at the Drukpa headquarters in Kathmandu is a former woman police officer from Jammu and Kashmir, Jigme Thupsten.

The Tibetan Drukpa lineage – or the order of the dragon yogis – which has come out in the open for the first time in 800 years – is hosting its maiden Annual Drukpa Council atop the hills on the outskirts of this city April 8-16.

Over 2,000 monks and high-profile devotees have assembled from across the globe to hear the Drukpa master’s discourse on religion and chart plans of action to carry the religion worldwide.

India figures prominently on the list, the Gyalwang Drukpa said.

The sect, an offshoot of Mahayana Buddhism which believes in service and welfare of humanity, has nearly 250,000 followers worldwide. It is the official religion of Bhutan and has a large following in the Ladakh, Spiti, Lahaul and Zanskar regions in Himachal Pradesh and in Nepal.