KUALA LUMPUR: Pro-women legislation is to be given due attention and
there will not be a repeat of waiting at least seven years for a Bill to
be passed, as what happened with the Domestic Violence Act.
“I guarantee you, for something good, it will not take seven years,” Datuk Seri Najib Razak said at the National Council of Women's Organisations (NCWO) golden jubilee celebrations here yesterday.
The
Prime Minister assured that the Government would hasten effort to make
changes to legislation, regulations, practices and thinking that
obstructed the progress of women.
Najib, who is also Women,
Family and Community Development Minister, invited NCWO to come up with a
working paper on advancing the cause of women.
NCWO president Tan Sri Prof Dr Sharifah Hapsah Syed Hasan Shahabudin said the council would send an updated version of a working paper to Najib as soon as possible.
She stressed the need for changes for women to be made speedily.
NCWO
had handed over a memorandum of the draft law on domestic violence in
1987 but it was only passed by Parliament in 1994 and implemented in
1996, she noted.
Dr Sharifah said laws, policies, structures and
administrative processes needed to be reviewed and changed so that women
would no longer face discrimination.
“There is still a lack of gender sensitivity in the public, private and political sectors,” she said.
Among
other things, she said, NCWO had wanted a law on sexual harassment
instead of just a code of conduct for institutions as well as judges to
implement the minimum five years imprisonment for rapists.
A
member of the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, Yasmeen Shariff,
said NCWO had also been pushing for a better family court with a full
family support system with welfare assistance and counselling and
mediation rooms.
NCWO deputy president Datuk R. Gurusamy
said that children should be made aware of the law on statutory rape
through education, so that they do not run foul of the law or be taken
advantage of.
In her speech, Sharifah said there was also a need
to narrow the income gap between men and women as 60% of the lowest
income female earners earned below RM3,000 a month.
Najib agreed
that this had to be looked into especially on how women could enhance
their skills and value-add them in an organisation.
Ivy Josiah,
the Women's Aid Organisation executive director, meanwhile recalled that
lobbying for the Domestic Violence Act actually started in 1985.
“We
have already highlighted all the issues in our previous reports to the
Government. Now that the Prime Minister has given an undertaking on
pro-women legislation, we can all get cracking,” she added.
(Source: The Star Online)
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