WUNRN
Libyans celebrate in Tripoli's landmark
Martyrs Square on Feb. 17, 2015, the upcoming fourth anniversary of the Libyan
revolution. (photo by MAHMUD TURKIA/AFP/Getty Images)
Libya - Women Face Cultural, Political &
Social Challenges in the New Libya
Author: Mustafa Fetouri - March 23, 2015
On June 25, right after she cast her
vote for the new Council of Representatives, Salwa Bugaighis was murdered
at her home in Benghazi in eastern Libya. She was Libya’s most prominent
female lawyer, a member of the former National Transitional Council (NTC)
that led the rebel movement in 2011 and well-known civil activist. In
February, Libya was shocked again by news of murder targeting yet another
well-known activist in Tripoli: Intissar al-Hasaari and
her aunt were killed at a busy road west of Tripoli's city center.
Those two cases made headlines inside and
outside the country, because the victims were well-known public activists.
However, many more violent crimes against women go unreported. So far, not a
single murder case has been thoroughly investigated, let alone solved and the
killers brought to justice.
Since NATO helped rebels topple the regime
of Moammar Gadhafi, women in the new Libya have
suffered ironically at the hands of those who claim to have liberated
them, most of whom became militias involved in crime. While claims of mass
rape during the 2011 war still remain uninvestigated, it is well known
that violence against women is a major issue. Because of social
taboos, it is hard for victims to come forward and the country’s successive
governments have made no serious efforts to look into the matter.
In terms of legislation, the biggest setback
has probably been the annulment of Gadhafi-era legislation
virtually banning polygamy. On the eve of Gadhafi’s murder in October
2011, NTC Chairman Mustafa Abdul Jalil called for polygamy to be legalized,
claiming that banning it ran counter to Sharia. In 2013, the law was
struck down and polygamy became legal
again.
During Gadhafi’s rule, it was almost
impossible for a man to marry a second wife. While polygamy was not banned
outright, it was made very difficult thanks to a clever legal maneuver.
The law required any man wishing to marry a second wife to obtain the
consent of his first wife. Such consent is only legal if obtained through a
court of law: A judge would ask the first wife, in private, whether she
permits her husband to marry a second time. Should a man marry a
second wife without the written consent of his first wife, the marriage
contract is illegal.
Although official figures are unavailable, it
is thought that this law played a significant role in making polygamy
almost obsolete.
The NTC was also responsible for another
piece of legislation that disadvantaged women when, in 2012, it adopted
the election law allocating only 10% of the seats to women
in the national elections, while leaving it to political parties how to
allocate seats at the local level. In a male-dominated society, women will have
little say at the local level if the law is not on their side, since all
political parties are led by men, making women’s chances of getting nominated
in any party’s list slim. In fact, and in spite of its role in the revolution,
the NTC itself only had two female members, one being the murdered
Bugaighis. The other is Salwa el-Deghali.
During the Gadhafi era, women made steady
progress in gaining access to education and work. It became very common to see
female lawyers, judges, civilian pilots and university professors.
One of the greatest achievements for women
under the Gadhafi regime was unlimited access to free education at all levels.
Realizing the importance of education in modernizing society, the former regime
made it compulsory for parents to keep their children of both sexes in school
until the age of nine. This is now reflected in Libyan women being highly
educated, as compared to the region. In Libya today, a majority of female
students intend to attend college and an almost equal number of women
(32%) as men (33%) hold university degrees, while almost 77% of female
high school graduates intend to pursue higher degrees both inside
Libya and abroad.
Women’s participation in civic action in the
new Libya is as low as 20%. One reason could well be the lack of security in
the country after the NATO intervention in 2011
that plunged Libya into the chaos that has prevailed ever since.
Similarly, while women are interested in politics and have voted in large numbers,
with nearly 66% voting in 2012, they participated less in the elections in June 2014. One explanation
for this regression could be disappointment and disillusionment
in the previous elections, which failed to stabilize the country or end
the violence.
While equality in the workplace was inching
forward, it stalled after the civil war of 2011 and the emergence of various
Islamist groups such as Ansar al-Sharia. These organizations are less
inclined toward gender equality, while some of them do not like
to see women working outside the home at all.
Yet, one of the problems women suffer in
Libya remains both cultural and social. Since society is tribally based and
male dominated, its view on women assuming a leading role in society tends to
be negative. After years of women serving in the military, police force,
education and the judiciary, such views are changing — however
slowly, and mainly in big cities — whereas in rural areas, the traditional
negative views of women are still strong.