At
a time when women are advocating for gender equality worldwide, some
governments are denying women their rights. Women’s groups are championing for
women empowerment and gender equality at the workplace and even in parliament.
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Picture by Fatemeh Bahrami / AA / Abaca Press / Polaris
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Many
countries have noted an increased number of women in the workforce, whilst others
are denying women that opportunity, infringing on their rights. The Iranian government has drafted laws that
will restrict the use of contraceptives and family planning methods.
According
to an article published in America Aljazeera (online), the laws are meant to
increase birthrate in the country as the country has witnessed a downward birth
trend since 2012.
“The proposed laws will entrench
discriminatory practices and set the rights of women and girls in Iran back by
decades,” Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, the deputy director for the Middle East and
North Africa at Amnesty International, said in a
statement. “The authorities are promoting a dangerous culture in
which women are stripped of key rights and viewed as baby-making machines
rather than human beings with fundamental rights to make choices about their
own bodies and lives.”
They
say the low birth rate is resulting from women who are keen on studying yet
their place is at home with the children. This is a violation of women’s rights
and also hinders working women from advancing their studies as well as
developing their careers. Read the full story here http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/3/11/amnesty-decries-iran-draft-law-to-boost-population.html
Is
this fair treatment to women especially at a stage where the world is
championing for women empowerment? What impact does it have on working women as
they have to venture into childbearing?
Imagine
if our government would formulate such laws and implement them, what impact
would it have on Zimbabwean working women? Readers have your say on this matter.





