The Japan Times - Nepali women still sidelined in post-uprising polls

EUR -
AED 4.258809
AFN 73.057741
ALL 96.243535
AMD 436.706792
ANG 2.075459
AOA 1063.397414
ARS 1640.860413
AUD 1.655423
AWG 2.087367
AZN 1.973582
BAM 1.956287
BBD 2.336371
BDT 141.885308
BGN 1.91069
BHD 0.43752
BIF 3447.513325
BMD 1.159649
BND 1.48345
BOB 8.015891
BRL 6.119953
BSD 1.159984
BTN 106.736101
BWP 15.564806
BYN 3.374425
BYR 22729.112169
BZD 2.333071
CAD 1.587611
CDF 2615.007459
CHF 0.906323
CLF 0.026557
CLP 1048.600784
CNY 8.001806
CNH 8.027708
COP 4409.923217
CRC 545.43338
CUC 1.159649
CUP 30.730687
CVE 110.291971
CZK 24.368566
DJF 206.570515
DKK 7.471471
DOP 69.567012
DZD 151.753894
EGP 57.839446
ERN 17.394729
ETB 179.926099
FJD 2.568508
FKP 0.865987
GBP 0.870223
GEL 3.136839
GGP 0.865987
GHS 12.492947
GIP 0.865987
GMD 84.654653
GNF 10173.443946
GTQ 8.896175
GYD 242.687254
HKD 9.05896
HNL 30.701508
HRK 7.532379
HTG 152.206564
HUF 388.618534
IDR 19602.699598
ILS 3.60228
IMP 0.865987
INR 106.777545
IQD 1519.678174
IRR 1524442.128924
ISK 144.10951
JEP 0.865987
JMD 181.204312
JOD 0.822157
JPY 182.809903
KES 149.814955
KGS 101.410691
KHR 4655.017912
KMF 492.850607
KPW 1043.804838
KRW 1714.771571
KWD 0.356453
KYD 0.966741
KZT 580.30441
LAK 24834.966055
LBP 103879.902757
LKR 359.617941
LRD 212.862053
LSL 18.988862
LTL 3.424141
LVL 0.70146
LYD 7.377804
MAD 10.797647
MDL 20.067821
MGA 4861.188753
MKD 61.62775
MMK 2434.859634
MNT 4139.362868
MOP 9.32162
MRU 46.08527
MUR 54.422337
MVR 17.916636
MWK 2011.091792
MXN 20.548445
MYR 4.57825
MZN 74.107394
NAD 18.988944
NGN 1596.916941
NIO 42.69044
NOK 11.238868
NPR 170.777762
NZD 1.97026
OMR 0.445919
PAB 1.159974
PEN 3.905772
PGK 5.065239
PHP 67.947867
PKR 324.225886
PLN 4.293605
PYG 7487.831072
QAR 4.241537
RON 5.097117
RSD 117.452709
RUB 90.053748
RWF 1695.414596
SAR 4.352224
SBD 9.329584
SCR 15.906197
SDG 697.533982
SEK 10.768758
SGD 1.482489
SHP 0.870037
SLE 28.29811
SLL 24317.250147
SOS 661.761827
SRD 43.592366
STD 24002.384286
STN 24.505993
SVC 10.150526
SYP 128.170136
SZL 18.996645
THB 36.756799
TJS 11.078209
TMT 4.05877
TND 3.405833
TOP 2.792156
TRY 51.009555
TTD 7.859922
TWD 36.849452
TZS 2972.062165
UAH 50.590471
UGX 4315.017983
USD 1.159649
UYU 44.560897
UZS 14158.645492
VES 488.617755
VND 30405.98577
VUV 137.800511
WST 3.149498
XAF 656.117447
XAG 0.013866
XAU 0.000225
XCD 3.134008
XCG 2.09062
XDR 0.816
XOF 656.117447
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.580972
ZAR 19.207781
ZMK 10438.235076
ZMW 22.185425
ZWL 373.40637
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.1350

    23.41

    -0.58%

  • GSK

    -1.2200

    57.07

    -2.14%

  • AZN

    -1.9700

    201.76

    -0.98%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    23.29

    -0.47%

  • BP

    -0.6100

    38.86

    -1.57%

  • BCE

    0.1700

    26.4

    +0.64%

  • RIO

    -4.3000

    95.31

    -4.51%

  • BTI

    -1.7100

    60.41

    -2.83%

  • NGG

    -3.1400

    90.74

    -3.46%

  • RELX

    0.2600

    34.94

    +0.74%

  • JRI

    -0.1600

    13.03

    -1.23%

  • BCC

    -1.8400

    78.75

    -2.34%

  • RYCEF

    -0.6800

    17.52

    -3.88%

  • VOD

    -0.3000

    14.88

    -2.02%

Nepali women still sidelined in post-uprising polls
Nepali women still sidelined in post-uprising polls / Photo: Prakash MATHEMA - AFP

Nepali women still sidelined in post-uprising polls

Nepali women risked their lives in last year's deadly anti-corruption protests that toppled the government.

Text size:

But when the country votes on Thursday, they will be largely absent from the ballot as candidates.

The September unrest demanded the end of an entrenched political elite and the rise of a new generation of leaders, ultimately ousting four-time prime minister KP Sharma Oli.

Former chief justice Sushila Karki, 73, has since led Nepal as its first woman prime minister. Yet when she steps down after the polls, parliament is again expected to be dominated by men.

Voters will elect 275 members of the House of Representatives, the lower chamber of parliament -- 165 through direct contests, and 110 through a party-list proportional representation (PR) system.

Just 10 percent of the more than 3,400 candidates running in the direct vote are women.

Ranju Darshana is one of them, campaigning door-to-door in the capital Kathmandu for the Rashtriya Swatantra Party (RSP) while heavily pregnant.

"It is about issues of half of the population," said Darshana, 29, who has been active in politics since she was a teenager.

"It is important that we build policies through the lens of women."

Sita Gurung, 49, was among nine women who won a seat for the Nepali Congress party in 2022 polls, but was not nominated this time around.

"No matter which revolution, we do not see a change," she said.

- 'Deny them chances' -

Nepal's constitution mandates that at least one-third of parliamentary seats be held by women.

Those provisions were introduced after the 2006 popular uprising that followed a decade-long civil war and paved the way for the abolition of the monarchy.

Women make up a significant proportion of the 110 seats allocated according to party vote share.

But critics say the arrangement has allowed parties to sideline women from directly elected races.

"It gives political parties an excuse that women will be included through the PR system, and deny them chances to contest," said former lawmaker Bidhya Bhattarai, who is not running this election.

"The situation is changing for women, so they can stand up and say that they will contest in the election," the former education minister in Oli's Marxist-led government added.

"But the numbers are low... We have to foster an environment that will encourage women to contest."

- 'Own revolution' -

Male politicians continue to wield greater influence in negotiating party tickets, reflecting deeply embedded gender biases in society.

Kunti Devi Pokhrel, contesting from the Rastriya Prajatantra Party, described the uphill battle many women face.

"We have to struggle to be a candidate in the party... They do not trust women, so we have to struggle and prove ourselves," she said.

Even those who are able to contest must confront gendered stereotypes, biased media coverage and online abuse.

Political analyst Sucheta Pyakurel pointed to deep structural barriers.

"There is no lens to view women as a viable and legitimate political actor," she said. "The same scenario is repeated in every election. The core issue is we have unequal citizenship status."

For Gurung, the moment calls for a new kind of mobilisation.

"Women are just not accepted," she said. "Perhaps it is time that we women lead our own revolution for change."

M.Ito--JT