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Uzbek Meeting Highlights the Trials of Women
Shukhrat Kurramov: 3/2/01
A EurasiaNet Partner Post from Transitions
Online
TASHKENT, Uzbekistan--Governmental officials and representatives
from local and international NGOs met in the city's United
Nations headquarters on 20 February to discuss the situation
of women in Uzbekistan. The meeting was the follow up to a
meeting of the Convention for Elimination of Discrimination
Against Women (CEDAW), which was held at the 24th Session
of the United Nations in New York on 15-20 January.
Women face a myriad of challenges in Uzbekistan, largely
because of strict interpretation of Islamic law and traditional
values. In Autumn 2000, a Gallup poll revealed that 50 percent
of respondents called for the restriction of women's rights.
Suicide rates for women are high. Last year, 209 women in
the Samarkand region attempted to commit suicide; 71 died.
One of the main reasons for the self-destructive behavior
is the burden of history, says Natalya Anarkulova, a lawyer
specializing in women's rights. Traditionally, women had no
rights and were afraid of opening up or opposing society.
She said that Islamic law is still the stable "core" of conscience
and makes women mostly insignificant.
Marfua Tokhtakhodjaeva, the chairman of Woman Resource Center
of Uzbekistan, stressed that traditional segments of society
exceed those segments that support greater rights for women.
She added that the Uzbek press furthers such trends: "Uzbek-language
mass media often examine public life, including relations
between men and women, from a traditional and religious point
of view."
Uzbekistan signed a convention on the removal of various
types of discrimination against women in 1995 and incorporated
it into its legislative framework. The presence of that convention
has played a significant role in the development and implementation
of state policy and of the development of the idea of women's
rights as human rights. In addition to those changes, the
CEDAW committee recommended more gender research centers in
its member countries as well.
At the meeting, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, the Maldives, and
Mongolia submitted their official reports on the state of
women for the first time, and according to Tokhtakhodjaeva,
the reports left a vivid impression on CEDAW members.
The above story is reposted with permission from Transitions
Online (TOL). TOL (http://www.tol.cz)
is an Internet magazine covering Central and Eastern Europe,
the Balkans, and the former Soviet Union. If you aren't already
a member, you can fill out the registration form at <http://www.tol.cz/trialsubscr.html>
to receive a free two-month trial membership. If you're a
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are available at <http://www.tol.cz/trialsubscr2.html>.
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Posted March 2, 2001 © Eurasianet
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