Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
03AMMAN5115
2003-08-12 16:57:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Amman
Cable title:  

JORDANIAN WOMEN PROTEST AGAINST PARLIAMENTARY

Tags:  PGOV PHUM KWMN SOCI JO 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 AMMAN 005115 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/12/2013
TAGS: PGOV PHUM KWMN SOCI JO
SUBJECT: JORDANIAN WOMEN PROTEST AGAINST PARLIAMENTARY
MOVES TO CURTAIL WOMEN'S RIGHTS

REF: AMMAN 5012

Classified By: CDA David Hale for Reasons 1.5 (B,D)

------
SUMMARY
-------

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 AMMAN 005115

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/12/2013
TAGS: PGOV PHUM KWMN SOCI JO
SUBJECT: JORDANIAN WOMEN PROTEST AGAINST PARLIAMENTARY
MOVES TO CURTAIL WOMEN'S RIGHTS

REF: AMMAN 5012

Classified By: CDA David Hale for Reasons 1.5 (B,D)

--------------
SUMMARY
--------------


1. (U) A group of Jordanian women conducted a peaceful
demonstration at the gates of the Parliament August 10 to
protest a recent Lower House decision to reject three
temporary laws concerning women's rights. The protesters
approached several MPs entering the building, some of whom
argued that the temporary laws were anti-family and
anti-Islamic, while others expressed solidarity with the
women's position. The battle will now enter the Senate, with
women's rights activists promising to lobby Senators to their
cause.

--------------
UP IN ARMS
--------------


2. (SBU) PolOff attended a demonstration on August 10 in
front of the Parliament organized by human rights activists
and women's groups to protest the recent Lower House decision
rejecting three temporary laws (promulgated in the absence of
a Parliament) concerning women's rights. These laws allowed
women to unilaterally initiate divorce proceedings, raised
the legal marriage age for both sexes to 18, and strengthened
criminal penalties against men who killed their wives or
female relatives caught in the act of committing adultery.
(See reftel for more information on the Lower House decision
and its ramifications.) Since December 2001, more than 800
Jordanian women have filed for divorce under the applicable
temporary law, while seven honor killings have been recorded
so far in 2003.


3. (C) Upon reaching the demonstration site around 9:00 a.m.,
there was a small group of about 20 women holding placards
with slogans such as, "What is the real reason for the
quickness in repealing this law?", "We are partners not
hostages", and "Justice and equality for women". Although
the press reported the final number of protest participants
at 100-150, PolOff eventually observed 50-60 participants,
including women dressed in modern Western clothes and women
wearing more traditional clothing and head scarves. PolOff
noted that the women were in an upbeat, almost festive, mood.


4. (C) PolOff asked Reem Abu Hassan, a lawyer, human rights

activist, and one of the protest organizers, how she had
advised others of the demonstration. She responded that
since government approval for the protest had only been
received the previous day, she and other organizers had to
rely on word of mouth, emails and phone text messages to
quickly spread the message.

--------------
MPs FEEL THE HEAT
--------------


5. (U) While many women were content to simply hold banners
and mill around, others were more confrontational and
surrounded parliamentarians' vehicles as they drove in for
their morning session. These women argued with conservative
MPs that rejection of the temporary laws was an unjustified
step backward, and urged more sympathetic MPs to support
their cause. MP Mahmoud Kharabsheh, a well known
conservative, told the group that, "We care about women's
rights, as much as you and even more," but at the same time
said that allowing women the right to initiate divorce went
against Shari'a law and would contribute to the destruction
of the Jordanian family.


6. (U) Conversely, MP Ghaleb Zu'bi, head of the Lower House
Legal Committee and from the same district as Kharabsheh,
promised the protesters that the Lower House would reconsider
the laws. MP Abdul Rahim Malhas, a firebrand from Amman and
frequent government critic, approached the women to assure
them that he would work hard to convince other MPs who
opposed the legislation to reexamine their position.

--------------
WHAT SAYETH THE KORAN?
--------------


7. (C) PolOff asked two veiled demonstrators, who preferred
to remain anonymous, how they countered religious based
arguments against the temporary laws. One of them explained
that in the Koran the prophet Mohammed was approached by a
married woman wishing to divorce her husband. The prophet
asked if she would willingly return the dowry given by her
husband and when she agreed, he authorized the divorce.
Thus, these women claimed, the religious argument had no real
basis and was used by men to "control" women and hold power
over them. Another woman countered by asking why only women
were accused of threatening the family by initiating divorce
and not men.


8. (U) Many demonstrators speculated that the Lower House
rejection of the women's rights laws was a way for
conservative MPs to flex their muscles, since repealing laws
of an economic nature would prove more contentious and
confrontational vis-a-vis the GOJ. Some of the protesters
also directed particular criticism at the two female MPs who
supported repeal of the temporary laws (out of the six women
members of parliament).

--------------
COMMENT
--------------


9. (C) The battle over these particular temporary laws will
now shift to the Senate, where women's rights activists
should find a more sympathetic audience, or at least an
audience more beholden to the King and containing reliable
supporters of the government. Women's groups have vowed to
actively lobby Senators to preserve their rights. Hassan,
for example, said that her organization (the National Council
for Family Affairs) would coordinate with other NGOs to
present their views and would closely follow debate in the
Senate Legal Committee. "Today's event was just one of many
we have planned to voice our objections," she said in a press
statement.
HALE