Saturday, December 14, 2013

Indian capital elects only three women to its parliament

NEW DELHI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Only three women won seats in the Indian capital's 70-member assembly in recent elections, showing women continue to face huge obstacles to political empowerment in the world's largest democracy, activists said on Monday.

New Delhi went to the polls on December 4, but results announced by the Election Commission on Sunday showed that almost all the seats went to male candidates, despite a record number of female voters – over 3.4 million – casting ballots.

Women's rights activists blamed the poor showing on the three main political parties – the Congress party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the newly formed Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) – who fielded few women candidates. Only nine percent of the 796 candidates in Delhi were women.

The three women elected were all from AAP.

"The political parties in India are all male-dominated and they don't want to give women the opportunity to empower themselves. If they really care about women, they should have better representation," said Ranjana Kumari, director for the Centre for Social Research (CSR).

Kumari said that many women who were selected as candidates were given "unwinnable" constituencies where they were pitted against powerful opposition candidates, adding this was often because the parties did not take female politicians seriously.

While there are a plethora of issues related to women that need to be addressed in India, gender experts say one of the most important is to ensure women have a political voice in state and national assemblies.

Gender equality in parliament, they say, would result in the empowerment of women in general. A stronger voice at the top would have a trickle-down effect, helping women at the grassroots level fight abuse, discrimination and inequality.

#33 PERCENT

Some of the most powerful figures in India's political history are women, such as former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and her daughter-in-law, Sonia Gandhi, who heads the ruling Congress-led coalition government and there are over one million female politicians represented in village councils.

Yet Indian women continue to face a barrage of threats – from female foeticide, child marriage, dowry and honour killings to discrimination in health and education and crimes such as rape, domestic violence and human trafficking.

Only 11 percent of seats in the Lok Sabha (lower house) and Rajya Sabha (upper house) of parliament are held by women, says the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU).

The IPU ranks India 108th in the world in terms of women’s representation in national legislatures, below less developed countries such as Pakistan which has 21 percent representation and Afghanistan with 28 percent.

Despite 17 years of protests, rallies, demonstrations and hunger strikes by the women's rights movement in India, activists say male lawmakers have blatantly blocked a bill aimed at giving women a more powerful voice.

The Women’s Reservation Bill, which would reserve one-third of seats at national and state assemblies for women, has been passed by the upper house, but blocked in the lower house.

The bill is likely to be tabled again in parliament in coming months and women's groups have launched a campaign called the "#33 Percent" to put public pressure on the government to approve the bill.

But they face stiff resistance from some prominent conservative patriarchal MPs as well as from certain minority groups who fear more seats for women will mean they will lose the quota of seats currently provided to them.

"On the one hand, these politicians promise all these things for women such as jobs and protecting our security, but we don't want that," said Kumari.

"We want to be able to get our own jobs and protect ourselves. We are telling them, please don't do anything for us, just give us the voice so we can empower ourselves."
Read more at http://www.trust.org/item/20131209131738-bdgif

Need to educate Muslim women stressed

A Mohammed Aslam, Commissioner of Minorities Welfare Department of Tamil Nadu, has said that Muslims have failed to give importance to education at the basic level. He was speaking at a state-level orientation programme on government welfare schemes for the Muslim community that was jointly organised by the Federation of District Muslim Women Aid Societies, Federation of Tamilaga Masjids Ayikkia Jamaath and the South India Education Trust at the SIET College on Sunday.
Aslam said that there are a lot of schemes introduced by the government, especially for education for the economic empowerment of minorities, especially women, but they are not capitalised effectively.
He elaborated on the various education loans that minorities can avail. Stating that the level of education among Muslim women is very low compared to other communities, he stressed on the need to promote higher education for them. He said that most people fail to utilise welfare schemes introduced by the government for the upliftment of minorities.  Padma Bhushan Moosa Raza, IAS, Former Chief Secretary of the Government of Jammu & Kashmir also presided over the programme.
Read more at http://www.newindianexpress.com/cities/chennai/Need-to-educate-Muslim-women-stressed/2013/12/10/article1937029.ece

UTV founder and entrepreneur Ronnie backs lingerie site Zivame

UTV founder and entrepreneur Ronnie Screwvala is leading a $6 million, or Rs 36 crore, investment into Zivame, a lingerie e-commerce startup which rides on the increasing women traffic in India's internet story.
Bangalore-based Zivame - founded by 33 year-old BITS Pilani alumnus Richa Kar two years ago - is betting on quadrupling online sales to Rs 1,000 crore in the next 3-5 years. Screwvala's investment company Unilazer Ventures is pumping in most of the cash, while existing investors too are participating in this round.
Zivame, which competes with other multi-brand e-tailers like Myntra and Jabong for online lingerie sales, has now raised $9 million after netting $3 million from IDG and Kalaari Capital in January this year.
"We are making a non-decrepit category like lingerie more accessible and a part of fashion accessories for women. Twenty percent our women customers have never shopped online before, and in a sense we are a change agent for many of them," Kar told TOI.
India has about 150 million internet users, with women comprising 39% of the traffic but growing faster than men in the domestic digital economy. This is significant as internet's share of Indian GDP estimated at 3.2% is the highest among the emerging countries. India's heavily fragmented lingerie market is estimated at $3 billion, dominated by unbranded players, dogged by a certain lack of shopping experience.
"We invest in broad-based consumption stories, which are scalable lending itself to building a brand. Indian shopping habits in this segment has not even touched the tip of the iceberg. Online shopping will be massive as it lends to private shopping," said Screwvala, who raked in Rs 2,000 crore selling UTV Software Communications to Walt Disney in 2011.
Globally, lingerie giant Victoria Secret garners over 27% of its $5.5 billion from online sales. The leading domestic lingerie brands like Peri Peri and Enamor are taking cue in a rapidly transitioning market. "We started selling online just twelve months ago, but 70% of our sales are already through multi-brand e-commerce channels. This amazed us. Good deals, convenience and privacy are among the key reasons driving the growth," said Akshay Mahendran, managing director of Daiki Brands, a Mumbai-based owner of Peri Peri and Biara.
Kar said the latest funding would be deployed to bolster technology backbone - to improve personalization, recommendations and visual merchandising - as well as marketing to get more tier II women buy online.
"We are preparing for the fast approaching inflection point. We want to give a beautiful experience, making it impulsive and indulgent," Kar added. "Lingerie is new chocolate," she quipped.
Read more at http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/Ronnie-backs-lingerie-site-Zivame/articleshow/27202796.cms

Create jobs, disposable income for rural women, urges expert

A study of a rural Indian village called Gove in Satara district of Maharashtra, spanning over 30 years (from 1975 to 2008), has revealed that funding for family planning, health and education programmes has made great strides. But the final step — creating jobs and disposable income for rural women — has not achieved any significant success.

Demographer and women's health specialist Dr Carol Vlassoff, in a new book, Gender Equality and Inequality in Rural India. Blessed with a Son, has published the results of the study and said that aid donors to India are going down the wrong path when it comes to bringing millions of rural women into the modern economy.

"So if India wants to compete in the global economy, a missing piece of the puzzle is getting young rural women to work in the modern labour sector," Vlassoff said in a release issued Tuesday.

Vlassoff showed, comparing survey information over thirty years, that employment, specifically of rural women, pays off in other ways as well.

She found that self-employed and professional rural women were more likely to use contraceptives and delay having their first child than unemployed women with the same amount of schooling. Ultimately, says Vlassoff, this can help slow population growth by increasing the age that women have their first child, and hence, the space between generations.

A key finding of Vlassoff's study is that the desire for sons in India has not changed over the years. Although families are now limiting their total number of children to one or two, having a son is still considered essential. Further, couples who only have girls continue having more children than they planned in order to produce a son. While some have argued that sons provide economic security for their parents, whereas daughters move away, Vlassoff did not find this to be the main reason for wanting sons in modern rural society. For example, widows living with sons were no better off financially than those living alone but they still were unhappy if their sons were not taking care of them. Vlassoff found that a preference for sons has emotional and cultural roots that go beyond economic, inheritance and kinship reasons.

Most rural families expressed great fondness for their daughters, saying that girls were more loving and caring than boys. But girls also meant that parents had to pay huge costs for their marriage. "Whereas having one girl was desirable, a bonus, having at least one son was a must," she writes.

Sex determination was a thinly disguised practice in the area, with one full room of a small local clinic dedicated to the "medical termination of pregnancy". The study found while dowry was legally abolished, it was replaced with other substantial gifts demanded by grooms from the bride's family. "So," said Vlassoff, "for poor families, having daughters could mean economic disaster". 
Read more at http://www.indianexpress.com/news/create-jobs-disposable-income-for-rural-women-urges-expert/1206160/0

Eve Ensler, gender rights icon, calls for sex-education drive

Iconic gender rights activist, playwright and founder of V-Day: A Global Movement for Ending Violence against Women and Girls, Eve Ensler, on Tuesday, has called for a massive sex-education drive in India.

A majority of men, she said, citing studies, learn about sex, for the first time, from pornography, which portrays women as objects.

“If you start on porn, then you basically violate the women or make the women feel terrible… resulting in a cycle called sexual misery,” she told students at Asian College of Journalism (ACJ).

Absence of sex education would mean continuing with the misery cycle that always escalates to violence, she said.

Ms. Ensler, whose works include ‘The Vagina Monologues,’ a play translated into 50 languages and performed in 140 countries, said violence against women is not a personal problem but connected to other systemic injustices, whether patriarchal, economic or gender, and media has a role in highlighting them.

New media journalists, she said, can help curb violence against women by creating a vision where women are equal, safe and free.

Ms. Ensler, herself a survivor of child sexual abuse, said, last year, India was avant garde in terms of the media coverage of the gang rape of a young woman in Delhi.

“That became a catalyst… even what happened in Tarun Tejpal’s (Tehelka editor-in-chief) case was a breakthrough. The story of violence against women is being told by the media,” she said.

Ms. Ensler said this year the V-Day movement to ‘Strike, dance, and rise for freedom, safety and equality’ is being escalated and deepened. While violence against women is epidemic and manifests itself differently from culture to culture in the form of female genital mutilation, gang rape, ‘I think it is the mother issue of our times.’

Her speech was preceded by a Thappattam performance and a poetry session. Theatre personality N.S. Yamuna, writer Parvathi Nayar and dancer Sangeeta Isvaran participated in a panel discussion.
Read more at http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/chennai/gender-rights-icon-calls-for-sexeducation-drive/article5444945.ece

Poonam Khubani Among Top 25 Women Entrepreneurs of NJ

Poonam Khubani, vice president of TeleBrands International and president of International Edge, was recently recognized as one of the Top 25 Leading Women Entrepreneurs of New Jersey according to the Leading Women Entrepreneurs Initiative.

LWENJ annually chooses a group of businesswomen in New Jersey who exhibit outstanding performance and achievement in business and economic innovation, community involvement, and advocacy for women.

According to LWENJ data, this year's Top 25 together generate an estimated revenue in excess of $5 billion, employ tens of thousands, and support hundreds of non-profits and women's advocacy groups.

Khubani leads the top consumer product companies that specialize in direct response television marketing and the creators of the familiar "As Seen on TV" logo. Both TeleBrands and International Edge create and sell products in over 130 countries globally.

Khubani's leadership and entrepreneurial know-how have resulted in tremendous international growth for the company, securing major retail store shelf space on every continent.

This year, TeleBrands is celebrating its 30th year in business. The company releases at least one dozen products annually and tests hundreds with the goal of providing consumers with items that solve common problems and reach mass audiences featuring a "WOW" demonstration.

Khubani is a frequent panelist at TeleBrands Inventors Days, which allow at-home inventors the opportunity to pitch their gadgets to the company with the hopes of having it brought to market as a TeleBrands "As Seen on TV" product.

The Indian American entrepreneur also works tirelessly with Children's Hope India, a foundation that helps disadvantage children in India.
Read more at http://www.indiawest.com/news/15611-poonam-khubani-among-top-25-women-entrepreneurs-of-nj.html#MuPjxBSbsK01isds.99