Women in
UAE
Introduction
The United Arab Emirates is firmly
committed to the enhancement of the status of women and the
country's Constitution guarantees equal rights for both men and
women. The basic rights of women are enshrined in the Saharjah
(Moslem law), and the UAE Women's Federation, headed by H H Sheikha
Fatima bent Mubarak, wife of the country's President, H H Sheikh
Zayed bin Sultan Al Niehyan, was founded in 1975 and to encourage
the country's women to play a full role in society. Among its major
activities is the promotion of women's education, with a particular
emphasis on adult literacy programme. Female literacy rates now
match those of males, while there are now more women at University
than men. Women are also providing a growing proportion of the
national workforce occupying posts ranging from senior civil
servants to engineers and bankers, as well as traditional jobs in
teaching and healthcare. Legal rights achieved as a result of
lobbying by the Federation include generous maternity
leave.
Women in the UAE have had the complete
support and commitment of Sheikh Zayed and the UAE Government in
their quest to play a full role in the development of the country.
The belief that women are entitled to take their place in society is
grounded in the UAE Constitution which states that the principles of
social justice should apply to all. Under the Constitution women
enjoy the same legal status, claim to titles, access to education
and the right to practice professions as men. The guarantees
enshrined in the Constitution have been incorporated into
implementing legislation. However, a legislative framework by
itself, although valuable, would not have been sufficient to achieve
emancipation. The President’s wife Sheikha Fatima bint Mubarak,
therefore, has worked tirelessly since the establishment of the
Federation to implement Sheikh Zayed’s vision of a modern society
based on Arab and Islamic traditions, recognizing that it was only
by organizing women that real progress could be made.
UAE
Women's Federation
Sheikha Fatima founded the first women’s
society in the country in 1972, the Abu Dhabi Women's Society. The
success of the Abu Dhabi association led to the creation of the
Dubai Women's Development Society, the Sharjah Women's Development
Society, the Umm al-Mou’meneen Women’s Development Society in Ajman,
the Umm al-Qaiwain Development Society and the Ras al-Khaimah
Women’s Development Society. These societies were subsequently
linked together under the UAE Women's Federation which was
established on 28 August 1975, again headed by Sheikha Fatima. To
date, the Federation has played a highly significant role in
assisting the women of the UAE to realize their full
potential.
The UAE Women’s Federation is an
autonomous body with its own budget. It has a number of committees
to run its activities, such as religious affairs, mother and child
care, social affairs, cultural affairs, sports, heritage and the
arts. Depending on the geographical size of the emirate, the
individual societies may have more than one branch and there are now
a total of 31 branches of the six societies, many operating in
remote areas of the country. Activities undertaken by the individual
branches include, illiteracy eradication, nursery classes,
housekeeping, dressmaking and handicraft classes, art classes, child
care advice, health education, vocational training projects, job
placement programmes, religious education, welfare assistance,
family advice, including mediation services, as well as a busy
calendar of social, cultural and sporting activities. As part of
efforts to revive the country's heritage, an environmental and
handicrafts programme was instituted in 1978 at the Women’s
Federation in association with the United Nations Development
Programme and ministries of health, labour and social
affairs.
In April 1998, Sheikh Zayed inaugurated
the new premises of the Women's Federation in Abu Dhabi. The three
story building, designed in a traditional Islamic style, occupies an
area of 8,000 square meters and was built at a total cost of Dh 22
million. Social planning. The priority of the Women’s
Federation in the early days was to help women emerge out of
seclusion, use their leisure time to become literate, and acquire
knowledge about the modern world in order to enable them to raise
their family's standard of living. But today's goals are linked to
comprehensive social planning in the country with a view to
increasing social cohesiveness.
The Federation is involved in the first
demographic survey of women and in the implementation of the
resolutions issued by the 1995 women's summit in Beijing. The
Federation is also engaged in health, education and social campaigns
to raise the standard of living of UAE families. Sheikha Fatima has
stressed the need to make further efforts to upgrade the standard of
humanitarian and social services. She also called for priority to be
given to the aged and disabled as part of the Women’s Federation
strategy for 1999. The Federation is currently cooperating with the
Marriage Fund’s efforts to provide support for the family
unit.
International
Women's Movement
UAE women have played an active role in
the international women’s movement, always taking care to ensure
that proper attention is paid to the recognition of the differences
between religions, cultures and traditions. The UAE strongly
believes that Islam offers guarantees for the position of women that
can act as a useful example to the rest of the world. In keeping
with this philosophy the UAE Women’s Federation has participated in
all of the major international women’s conferences of the last
couple of decades, beginning with that held in New Mexico, in 1975,
followed by Copenhagen in 1980 and Nairobi in 1985, culminating in
Beijing in 1995.
Seminars and
Conferences
In addition the Women’s Federation has
both participated in and organized numerous local and regional
seminars on matters of particular importance to women and the
family. The Federation is also a prominent member of the Abu
Dhabi-based Gulf Coordination Committee, also chaired by Sheikha
Fatima. In line with the Federation’s desire to spearhead the
advancement of women, Techno sphere ‘99, a three-day conference to
study the impact of science and technology on Arab women, was held
at the Women’s Federation building in April 1999. Forty experts from
20 Arab countries participated. Recommendations were made and a
draft strategy formulated to expand technological and vocational
education for women in the Arab world. This strategy is to be
submitted to the UNESCO conference on science and technology in
Romania late in 1999.
The UAE also hosted the Arab Women's
Week, honoring the Arab family and the Refugee Women Week addressing
the problems of refugee women. The latter was organized in
collaboration with the UAE Red Crescent Society, of which Sheikha
Fatima is honorary chairwoman, and the UNHCR.
Women in
Education
Educational opportunities, the real
stimulus for emancipation and development, are now open to women at
all levels in the UAE. The number of female students registered at
UAE schools has increased 14-fold: statistics show that
approximately 270,000 female students were registered in the
academic year 1996–97 compared with 19,000 in 1972–73. Of the 14,104
students attending local universities in the 1996–97 academic yea r,
11,125 were female and 2,979 we re male. The 1975 census lists 3,005
females with a first university degree or equivalent. By the 1995
census that figure had risen to a staggering 61,496. During the same
period 18,564 women graduated from illiteracy eradication centers.
Female students are also achieving impressive results in their
studies, outstripping their male counter parts at every level.
Sheikha Fatima has said that women have no choice but to excel in
education to compensate for the years that they had endured without
the light of knowledge.
Women in
Employment
This avid embrace of educational
opportunities has given UAE women a chance to participate in the
development of their society alongside men. Today UAE women are
making their presence felt in society as civil servants, university
professors, teachers, lawyers, engineers, doctors, under
secretaries, business women, administrators, media and as members of
the police force and the army. Despite the major advances, however,
more needs to be done. For example, there remains a need to increase
the apparent unwillingness of some well-educated women to take
up employment. In 1985 females constituted 9.6 per cent of the
labour force, by 1995 this figure had risen only to 11.7 per cent.
In part, studies have shown that this is due to custom and tradition
while economic prosperity also means that employment is a matter of
choice, rather than of necessity. T h e re are also indications that
the educational qualifications obtained by many of the UA E ’s women
are not always those most in demand in the job market. A significant
number of UAE women also cease working after marriage and bearing
children, partly because of an insufficiency of childcare centers
and partly because of the well-founded belief that maternal care is
likely to be more beneficial for their children. Another problem
that has been identified is the need for women to take up employment
in a wider range of professions. Although barriers have begun to
crumble in recent years, there is still a strong emphasis on the
health and education sector. Civil Service Commission figures show
that in 1996 44.3 per cent of federal government employees were
women. In the same period over 65 per cent of teachers were
female.
Maternity
Leave
To address some of the issues
discouraging women from working the Federal National Council
approved a law governing maternity leave in February 1999. The FNC
revised the text of Article 55 to give women entitlement to three
months’ maternity leave with full pay. On motherc a re and childhood
issues, the Council has said that a woman would be entitled to five
separate periods of maternity leave during her employment. The law
stipulates that a woman is also entitled to nine months' leave in
total to look after her newborn child, comprising three months with
full pay and six months at half pay.
Women in
Politics
Sheikha Fatima has stressed that society
as a whole will benefit enormously if the UAE enters the
twenty-first century empowered by the participation of women in all
walks of life, particularly the political arena. This, she
considers, is a natural development, women having excelled in all
other fields. Sheikha Fatima believes that women should not consider
entry into political life as an honor but rather a duty. ‘Women
joining the FNC should serve all of society and not only women's
rights’,
she said. Sheikha Fatima added that UAE women
enjoyed all their legal rights and freedom and have occupied
some of the highest posts in the country thanks to the support
of Sheikh Zayed. ‘Despite this progress, UAE women maintain
their traditional role as mothers, adhere to the teachings of
Islam and are determined to reflect the true picture of their
country’. |
Humanitarian
Award
Sheikha Fatima received the Humanitarian
Personality of the Year award for 1998 at a glittering function in
Dubai. The award was presented by Sheikha Hind bint Maktoum bin Juma
Al Maktoum, wife of General Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum,
Crown Prince of Dubai and UAE Defence Minister, in the presence of a
number of women leaders from the Arab world, including Queen Rania,
wife of King Abdullah of Jordan Princess Sarah Al Saud from Saudi
Arabia and Sheikha Latifa, wife of Kuwait's Crown Prince. Wives of
Their Highnesses Members of the Supreme Council and Rulers of the
Emirates we re also present. The ceremony was organized by the
Rashid Paediatric Therapy Center (RPTC) under the patronage of
Sheikha Hind to confer the award, instituted by the RPTC, on the
UAE's First Lady.
Sheikha Fatima had already received the
United Nations Shield in 1986 from the UN Population Fund and in
December 1997, in recognition of her achievements, she had the
unique honor of being presented with simultaneous accolades and
awards of recognition by five organizations of the UN system. The
ceremony publicly acknowledged Sheikha Fatima’s leadership of the
women’s movement for over a quarter of a century and by so doing
represented an expression of recognition and commendation from the
UN system for the UAE Government and its
people. |