Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07DAKAR785
2007-04-10 18:22:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Dakar
Cable title:  

PARLIAMENTARY GENDER PARITY LAW NOT AS GOOD AS IT

Tags:  PGOV SOCI KWMN PINR KDEM SG 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO0105
PP RUEHPA
DE RUEHDK #0785/01 1001822
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 101822Z APR 07
FM AMEMBASSY DAKAR
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 8042
INFO RUEHZK/ECOWAS COLLECTIVE
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 DAKAR 000785 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR AF/W, AF/RSA, DRL/AE AND INR/AA
PARIS FOR POL - D'ELIA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/10/2017
TAGS: PGOV SOCI KWMN PINR KDEM SG
SUBJECT: PARLIAMENTARY GENDER PARITY LAW NOT AS GOOD AS IT
COULD BE

REF: A. 06 DAKAR 2610


B. 06 DAKAR 4748

Classified By: Ambassador Janice L. Jacobs for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

SUMMARY
-------
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 DAKAR 000785

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR AF/W, AF/RSA, DRL/AE AND INR/AA
PARIS FOR POL - D'ELIA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/10/2017
TAGS: PGOV SOCI KWMN PINR KDEM SG
SUBJECT: PARLIAMENTARY GENDER PARITY LAW NOT AS GOOD AS IT
COULD BE

REF: A. 06 DAKAR 2610


B. 06 DAKAR 4748

Classified By: Ambassador Janice L. Jacobs for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

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

1. (SBU) At President Wade's initiative, a new law requires
gender parity in the proportional lists -- but not the
constituency lists -- of candidates in future legislative
elections. Many women consider this a major step forward,
but one of the most outspoken, Penda Mbow, calls it a Wade
campaign stratagem and distraction from Senegalese women's
real issues. She and others think an influx of
unsophisticated, rural and perhaps illiterate women will
further weaken an already underperforming parliament.
Meanwhile, opposition parties still stunned by Wade's
re-election suspect Wade designed the parity requirement to
sow confusion in their ranks although it will not apply for
the June 3 election that many opposition parties have decided
to boycott. END SUMMARY.

EQUALITY OR CONDESCENSION?
--------------

2. (SBU) Using an expedited process and by unanimous vote,
the National Assembly on March 27 mandated parity for the 60
seats to be selected by proportional representation in
upcoming elections. Opposition Socialist MP Aminata Mbengue
Ndiaye introduced an amendment requiring parity for the 90
seats to be elected at district level as well, arguing "there
are now 24 women deputies out of 120 and (Wade) is offering
30 out of 150. That is regression and a new form of
discrimination." When Wade's ruling Senegalese Democratic
Party (PDS) rejected her amendment, she promised to challenge
the new law for which she apparently voted in court. Her
appeal was at least partially successful since the
Constitutional Council and the Director of Elections have
declared that the new law will not be in effect for the June
3 legislative elections.


3. (SBU) The law's passage prompted a biting exchange
between two prominent women. Historian Penda Mbow, just
returned from Georgetown and preparing to teach at Columbia

next year, called the law a distraction from real needs. She
called for measures to "liberate women from polygamy,
artificial skin whitening, infanticide, pedophilia and every
other form of violence." She called Family Minister Aida
Mbodj, who spearheaded the legislation for Wade, a "political
turncoat who once called Wade all sorts of names but was now
behaving as his slave. She pivots all debates on rank,
precedence money and honor and doesn't understand
intellectual combat." Mbodj, who had shared advocacy of the
law with respected women's leader Haoua Dia Thiam, struck
back quickly and bluntly: "If Penda Mbow is mad at the
President, it's because he was not enchanted by the low caste
support she organized to keep herself in power. And I'll
refrain, due to modesty and discretion, from commenting on
her femininity (condition de femme)."


4. (C) Penda Mbow shared with the Ambassador her concerns
that the parity law was a politically inspired half-measure
that would deflect political action from women's real needs
even as it weakened the parliament. Women's needs, and
related family and children's needs, she said, were broader
and needed to be addressed with more far-reaching social
policy. Women's representation in parliament was desirable
and necessary. With the National Assembly expanded from the
current 120 to 150, though, it is still unlikely women would
reach or even approach real parity. Further, while there are
some extremely talented women in the parliament, there are
also several from villages, unused to operating in a
legislative body or even in an urban environment, unaware of
key issues, and in some well-known cases illiterate. Real
reform would bring greater numbers of fully qualified women
MPs devoted to effecting change in the conditions of women
and the family.

WOMEN OF STATURE OR MACHIAVELLI'S GIRLS?
--------------

5. (C) The Socialist-led opposition has few but extremely
competent women in parliament and party leadership. Aminata
Mbengue is a down-to-earth, no-nonsense woman who worked her
way up the party structures while building a loyal following
both among Socialist men and working class and poorer women.
She has counterparts elsewhere in the national Socialist
party structure, such as the country's only regional council
president, Kaolack's Mata Sy (Ref B),who is far earthier,
none-would-call-sophisticated, but intellectually and
politically sharp as a needle. In stylistic contrast,

DAKAR 00000785 002 OF 002


Mbengue's main rival for Socialist women's leader, Aissata
Tall Sall, is an elegant and polished international lawyer
who has long been on many Socialist lists as potential
Foreign Minister.


6. (C) The PDS, too, has some intriguing and capable women,
including, for example, one young woman deputy who at our
last encounter was busy working on a doctorate in political
science at a Scottish university. In general, though, Wade
has appointed women deputies as he has appointed men, because
of political, ethnic or religious affiliations rather than
because of talent. Aminata MBengue believes Wade designed
the new law "to create problems for the party," but that the
PDS "will not be spared, since the law will create discontent
there as well." Wade's former long-term Labor Minister Yero
De, now in opposition, agrees that this was a Wade political
ploy: "the Socialists have their well-defined structures
built up over years, and replacing men with women now will
just create jealousies and resentments. Wade, though, can
just name whoever he likes as a PDS candiate."

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

7. (SBU) Both sides may be overstating the effects of this
legislative change. Introducing parity in the proportional
list without doing so in the constituency list limits the
number of women who can realistically be expected in the next
parliament. The Socialists may indeed suffer
organizationally in the future, but one of their problems for
years has been an inability to identify and promote new
talent, and this law may force them to do so to a degree.
Since the Socialists and a number of other major opposition
parties have decided to boycott the June 3 election, they
have five years to adjust. Penda Mbow is right that poor
choice of candidates could affect the quality of
parliamentary representation, but then there are also
numerous male yokels and illiterates in the current
parliament. A careful selection of candidates, ideally some
with more energetic ideas about increasing parliamentary
initiative and working on the most pressing social issues, is
what is needed. END COMMENT.


8. (U) Visit Embassy Dakar's SIPRNet site at
http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/af/dakar.
JACOBS