Those who think that Algerians have been passive victims of their
country's political problems need look no further than the Algerian
women's movement for a change of mind. Twenty-five years ago, a unique
relationship developed between Algeria and the non-profit organization,
Women Living Under Muslim Laws (W.L.U.M.L.), which is going strong even
today.
W.L.U.M.L. provides assistance to women whose lives are governed by
so-called "Islamic" laws or customs. The organization opposes the use
of faith to further political causes and builds awareness of women's
rights violations committed in the name of Islam.
In 1984, Algerian women watched in amazement as the government
passed a law that institutionalized women's legal status as "minors."
Women had demonstrated against the ratification of this law for more
than two decades, believing it stood in stark opposition to Article 29
of the Algerian constitution, which declares, "Citizens are equal
before the law, regardless of birth, race, sex, opinion or any other
condition of personal or social circumstance."
Algerian feminists responded immediately.
Demonstrations against the law intensified and three women were put in
solitary confinement without proper investigation or trial. In reaction
to this injustice, nine women from Algeria, Morocco, Sudan, Iran,
Mauritius, Tanzania, Bangladesh and Pakistan founded W.L.U.M.L. to
support the struggles of these women in Algeria and elsewhere.
W.L.U.M.L. member Marieme Helie Lucas, an Algerian sociologist,
recalled: "The three Algerian women were released within a month and a
half of campaigning, with telegrams arriving on the president's desk
from everywhere in the world."
The non-profit organization continued playing an important role in
Algeria during the civil war in the 1990's between the outlawed
political party, the Islamic Salvation Front (F.I.S.), and the Algerian
government. Despite the difficult environment, women continued the
struggle to reinstate their legal rights as equal citizens while
simultaneously enduring indiscriminate violence as a result of the war.
W.L.U.M.L. provided these Algerian women with a platform to voice
their frustrations by inviting them to participate in international
conferences, including the United Nations' World Conference on Women in
Beijing in 1995, where they could publicly denounce the crimes against
women that the F.I.S. and other armed Algerian groups had committed.
Work on behalf of Algerian women continued even when violence from the
war gradually lessened and international focus was diverted elsewhere.
In January 1999, the Algerian government presented its official
report on discrimination against women to the Convention on the
Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women. In response,
the W.L.U.M.L. and New York University's International Women's Human
Rights Law Clinic collaborated on an unofficial report outlining "the
rise and ongoing threat of politicized, violent religious
fundamentalism [in Algeria] and its project to impose its particular
view of Islam through the theocratization of the state and/or through
violence and terror."
In 2001, female workers in the small Algerian town of Hassi Messaoud
were savagely assaulted by a crowd of 300 men following a sermon by an
extremist imam at the local mosque. W.L.U.M.L. encouraged international
networks to respond to the incident by sending letters to the Algerian
government. Along with several Algerian human and women's rights
associations, they pressed for the defendants to be tried in court.
Several perpetrators were convicted and found guilty in 2004, and the
assaulted women were formally acknowledged as victims.
More recently, Cherifa Kheddar, the chair of Djazairouna, an
association of families that are victims of terrorism, was threatened
in 2008 with unfair dismissal and continuous harassment by Algerian
authorities after she revealed to the public the government's
reconciliation policy (the Law on Civil Concord) with armed Islamic
political groups, including the Islamic Salvation Army (A.I.S.), the
Armed Islamic Group (G.I.A.) and the Islamic Front for Armed Defense
(F.I.D.A.), and for speaking out about crimes committed but pardoned
without trial.
In the end, the government suspended Kheddar from her position,
although it never formally dismissed her from the job. After a
nomination bid from W.L.U.M.L., Cherifa was awarded the International
Prize for Human Rights by the International Service Human Rights Awards
on Dec. 8, 2008.
Today, the international spotlight is no longer on Algeria, but
W.L.U.M.L. remains watchful of discrimination against Algerian women.
This unfailing support of W.L.U.M.L.'s international network provides
women's movements in the country with the necessary strength to stand
up to all kinds of pressure and to continue the difficult path towards
full acceptance of women's rights in Algeria and beyond.
Samia Allalou is a Paris-based Algerian journalist, television
anchor and documentary filmmaker, and has been a board member of
W.L.U.M.L. (www.W.L.U.M.L..org) since 2007. This article was published
by Common Ground News Service (www.commongroundnews.com).
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