Sara Khojoyan
Women had a highly visible role in the peaceful protests that
unseated Armenian premier Serzh Sargsyan last month, with female
activists seen on the barricades and setting up the roadblocks in
demonstrations that brought the capital Yerevan to a standstill.
But those who hoped that this level of involvement would lead to a
new government with a fairer gender balance have been disappointed.
The journalist-turned-politician who led the protests, Nikol
Pashinyan, promised the National Assembly on May 8 he would ensure
proper representation for women, who he acknowledged “played a major
role” in unseating Sargsyan and the ruling Republican party.
“We need to create equal opportunities for all women to continue
being part of political decisions in the new Armenia,” Pashinyan said.
Some hailed this as a historic speech, the first time in Armenia’s
history when a prime minister had highlighted the role of women in the
country’s future success.
However, just a few days later, Pashinyan warned that that there
would in fact be few female politicians in his cabinet due to an
agreement he had reached to share positions amongst a number of other
parties.
Indeed, only two of the new government’s 17 ministers – for culture
and for labour and social affairs – are women. All three deputy prime
ministers are all men.
The extraordinary events that led to the fall of the government began
on March 30, when Pashinyan began walking from Armenia’s second city
Gyumri to Yerevan with the stated intention to bring down Sargsyan and
his Republican party after more than 20 years’ rule.
Although Pashinyan was met by only a few thousand supporters in
Yerevan on April 13, many more flooded the capital four days later when
Sargsyan was re-elected as prime minister by a parliamentary vote. The
streets were filled with tens of thousands of people angry over
corruption and political reform that seemed calculated to concentrate
power in the hands of a select few. Sargsyan resigned on April 23.
A handful of women were among those addressing the crowds gathered at
Republic Square. The first was Maria Karapetyan, development director
of the Imagine Centre of Conflict Transformation.
“I want to address my sisters who stand together, hand in hand and
fought a double fight for the change of power in Armenia and for their
equal rights in public. Long live sisters!” she told the crowds.
But although there was a high level of female involvement in the
protests, they made up a far less visible part of the protest movement’s
leadership.
This was the subject of much discussion on social media during the
so-called velvet revolution, and there were hopes that the country’s new
leadership would reflect a fresh approach to inclusion.
Ashot Khurshudyan, an economic expert at Yerevan’s International
Centre of Human Development, said that it was important to note that,
although the public speeches were dominated by men, the extent of female
participation in the protests was unprecedented.
“Women are the most neglected part of our society. And these
demonstrations are a signal not only to the system of governance but to
the entire society that we have an able part of society which is
alienated,” he said.
Armenia is still a patriarchal society where women are expected to
conform to certain gender roles. It is ranked 97 out of 144 countries by
the World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report 2017. Armenian
women lack access to political empowerment, making up around 17 per cent
of the country’s parliament, with 18 female MPs out of 105.
There are no female governors or mayors anywhere in the country.
Barely two per cent of those with leadership roles in rural
communities are women, according to a study carried out by academic
Ruzanna Tsaturyan.
“In political discourse, women were viewed in reproductive roles
typical for a patriarchal society,” she said. “Their child-bearing and
maternal functions were emphasised. Women were presented in sexist and
stereotypical feminine models in politician’s speeches. These texts were
identical and one-dimensional,” Tsaturyan concluded.
Many female civil society activists who played a key role during the
protests say that they are disappointed with how little the political
culture has changed.
Lara Aharonian, the founder and manager of Yerevan’s Women’s Resource
Centre, spent many days in April on the street protesting and was even
detained at one point.
She said that as the role of women in social change had long been
minimised in Armenian culture, Pashinyan’s public address marked a
significant step forward.
“Women were active for years over many issues – environment, issues
in the army or women’s rights and etc. And it was the first time that
women’s role in all the fights was acknowledged.”
Nonetheless, Aharonian noted, “His speech doesn’t mean we have
reached our aims. There is still a long fight ahead to change the
patriarchal values that almost everyone in Armenia has. Maybe with this
new government, our chances to reach our goals have increased.”
Some have played down the gender imbalance in the new government.
Political analyst Hrant Ter-Abrahamyan said that this should not be seen
as a major issue.
“When we start counting, we start considering women as objects, as if
enough women in the cabinet will solve the gender issues,” he said,
adding, “We will have women ministers and women prime ministers in
Armenia, and not because of their gender but for their respective
qualities.”
However, others argue that the only way to fight for gender equality is to institute quotas for women in public positions.
Yerevan city council member Zara Batoyan, from Pashinyan’s Civil
Contract party, also spoke from the stage in Republic Square. She said
that more needed to be done to encourage women to take a public stance.
“I was calling on women through the whole process to make speeches on
stage. Women were always involved in important issues and I was happy
when four of them agreed to speak on one of the days because they
actually had a say,” she continued, adding, “Yes, nobody forbade or
hindered them, but as we know, not stopping doesn’t mean supporting or
encouraging.”
"Eurasia Review," May 22, 2018 (https://www.eurasiareview.com/22052018-where-are-the-women-in-armenias-revolution/)
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