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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, January 27, 2001 |
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Southern States
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Women break quota barrier in local bodies
By C. Gouridasan Nair
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, JAN. 26. Even as Parliament gropes in the
dark to find the exact level at which women's reservation should
be pegged, the local bodies in Kerala have shown that the sky
will not fall off if women are given more than the mandatory 33.3
per cent seats.
The three-tier local bodies in Kerala, to which elections were
held in September, 2000, have a fair sprinkling of women
councillors going by figures available with the People's Plan
Campaign Cell of the State Planning Board. Of all the elected
people's representatives in the local bodies, 38 per cent are
women, up from 35.8 per cent in the councils that demitted
office. Elections to a few hundred seats are yet to be conducted
and when these are over, the total number of women
representatives might well go up from the present 5,000-odd to
6,500 out of the 17,074 councillors at all the three levels.
But there seems to be a catch here. As of now, presence of women
as a percentage of the total number of elected representatives is
the highest in Block Panchayats, their strength being 40.79 per
cent. Politically, the Block Panchayats are the weakest link in
the three-tier panchayat raj system and the higher representation
for women at this level could be a suggestive of the political
parties' readiness to field more women in a tier which does not
matter too much, either politically or administratively.
The presence of women is the most insignificant in Municipal
Corporations (35.07 per cent). At the level of the Grama
Panchayats, they number close to 5,000 (approx. 36 per cent) and
at the level of the District Panchayats, their strength is only
34.7 per cent. Of the total number of elected women
representatives, 78 per cent are members of Grama Panchayats. Of
the remaining women representatives, 9.6 per cent are in Block
Panchayats, 11.06 per cent in Municipal Corporations and 1.25 per
cent in District Panchayats.
The rise in the number of elected women representatives is
attributed to the increase in the total number of wards from
14,173 to 17,074 and the higher number of who entered the fray in
the September elections. Since the seats reserved for women come
to only 33.3 per cent, their actual strength in the local bodies
suggest that roughly 700 women had got elected to their
respective local bodies from general seats. It is also estimated
that 70 per cent of the women who were members of the outgoing
local body council have got reelected.
Statistics also show that almost 70 per cent of the women elected
representatives are less than 40 years old and roughly 25 per
cent are below 30 years of age. Interestingly, in the case of
men, only 48 per cent are aged below 40 years and men aged below
30 years is a meagre 13 per cent. However, overall, there has
been an improvement in the presence of youth in the local bodies
as compared to the councils that went out of office.
In respect of educational attainments too women are ahead of men.
Roughly 22 per cent of the women elected representatives are
graduates or post-graduates as compared to their 20 per cent male
counterparts. If those who have undergone pre-degree courses too
are taken into account, the total number of women representatives
who have had college education would stand at 44.5 per cent.
Among the women, 47.58 per cent have had high school education,
probably a sign of the equal opportunities available to women in
the State. In the case of men, the relevant figure is a shade
lower, 46.95 per cent. The same goes for post-graduates, the
figures being 4.16 per cent in the case of women and 4.04 in the
case of men.
But figures relating to work participation rates of men and women
show that the latter is at a disadvantage. Of the women
representatives, 38.05 per cent are jobless as compared to 6.91
per cent men. Among the women representatives, only 8.84 per cent
are full-time political activists. In the case of men, 21.88 per
cent are full-timers in politics. Women score over men only in
terms of the number of teachers who have opted to contest the
local body elections. Among the women representatives, 5.92 per
cent are school teachers and another 34.35 per cent anganavadi
teachers. In comparison, only 4.94 per cent of the men who have
got elected to the local bodies are teachers.
Although surveys conducted by different agencies have come up
with divergent figures, the general trend appears to be one of
working women preferring to stay clear of politics at the local
level. According to the State Planning Board, working women
constituted 48.2 per cent of the women representatives in the
last local body councils. However, the Kerala Sastra Sahithya
Parishad (KSSP) had put the figure at 44.13 per cent and the
State Election Commission at 34.28 per cent. The latest survey
conducted by the Planning Board shows that working women as a
percentage of the total number of women elected representatives
came to only 32.57 per cent.
Among the women representatives, 68.4 per cent have got elected
to the local bodies for the first time. Thirty five per cent of
the women have entered the local bodies because of their family
background. Another 25 per cent stumbled into it. Only 19 per
cent have entered the scene on account of their commitment to
political ideologies or participation in struggles.
The caste-wise representation of women in the local bodies also
appear to augur well for the future. For example, the number of
women among representatives belonging to the Muslim community has
gone up from 26.6 in the last local bodies to 38 per cent in the
reconstituted ones. A similar trend, the Planning Board survey
says, is also noticeable in the case of forward communities.
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