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Feminist Daily News Wire
April 8, 2004

Algeria: Woman Runs for President for First Time

A woman is running for president for the first time in Algeria's history. Louisa Hanoun has used her candidacy to speak out against Algeria’s current discriminatory family law.

The current law forces women to seek approval from a male relative to marry and makes polygamy legal. For over two decades women’s rights groups have been campaigning to change the current family code to treat women and men equally. A leading Algerian women’s rights advocate, Akila Ouared Abdelmoumene, said, “In our country a woman can become President of the Republic, but she has no control over her private life,” reports Reuters.

Hanoune spent six months in jail in the 1980s for her fight against the National Liberation Front that was the ruling party at the time. She currently has 8 percent of the vote, according to Reuters.

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Feminist.org: Your daily source for the feminist perspective on national and global events. Media Resources: Reuters 4/7/04; Middle East Online 4/7/04

 

 


Also In the News

4/8/2004 Algeria: Woman Runs for President for First Time - A woman is running for president for the first time in Algeria's history. . . .

4/8/2004 Woman Faces Threat of Honor Killing in Pakistan - A young woman from the Sindh Province of Pakistan has appealed to Pakistan’s President Musharraf for protection from being killed in the name of "honor." According to IRIN News, Rozina Ujjar was divorced by her husband for standing outside of her house at the same time that a 15-year-old boy passed by. . . .

4/6/2004 More Afghan Women Registering to Vote; Registration Remains Low - A United Nations spokesperson has reported that the number of women registering for Afghanistan's upcoming elections has increased in the last two weeks. . . .

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