TDEA, FAFEN Issue Report On 'Women Parliamentarians Performance 2022-2023'

(@FahadShabbir)

TDEA, FAFEN issue report on 'Women Parliamentarians Performance 2022-2023'

Trust for Democratic Education and Accountability (TDEA) and Free and Fair Election Network (FAFEN) on Thursday issued a report on 'Women Parliamentarians Performance 2022-2023' highlighting their achievements and failures throughout the period

ISLAMABAD, (UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 9th Mar, 2023 ) :Trust for Democratic education and Accountability (TDEA) and Free and Fair Election Network (FAFEN) on Thursday issued a report on 'Women Parliamentarians Performance 2022-2023' highlighting their achievements and failures throughout the period.

According to executive summary of the report, women members of the National Assembly and the Senate upheld their tradition to assertively perform their legislative, representative, and oversight functions during 2022-23.

Constituting one-fifth of the Parliament, women parliamentarians accounted for nearly 35 percent of the parliamentary agenda, 36 percent in the National Assembly and 30 percent in the Senate, it added.

The report said women remained the most regular members in both Houses throughout the year which witnessed a spiral of political instability arising out of public protests orchestrated by Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) after the passage of the Resolution of No-Confidence against the former prime minister in April 2022. Barring its 20 members, PTI MNAs including 27 women members, stayed away from assembly proceedings during the entire year on the pretext of en masse resignations which were only retracted earlier this year.

The report further said, on average, each female (MNA) attended 57 (66 percent) of the National Assembly sittings as compared to an average of 46 (53 percent) sittings attended by their male counterparts. Similarly, each female Senator attended an average of 39 (68 percent) Senate sittings against their male counterparts' average of 32 (56 percent) sittings.

Despite remarkable contributions made by women legislators, their agenda continued to be neglected in the Parliament. Almost half of the Calling Attention Notices (CANs), more than two-thirds of the Private Member Bills, and all Private Member Resolutions, Motions for Public Interest Discussions, and Proposals for Amendments to Assembly Rules either lapsed or remained pending until the last session.

The Questions remained the only intervention where female MNAs received a higher response rate than their male colleagues, it maintained.

It said unlike the National Assembly, the Senate appeared more responsive to female legislators' agenda. A gender-disaggregated comparison of agenda items shows both male and female Senators were responded to by the House in a similar pattern. However, the female Senators' motions for public interest discussions (including motions under Rule 218 and Adjournment Motions) received less parliamentary attention than male Senators' motions.

On average, each female MNA contributed 18 agenda items to the Orders of the Day against nine by male MNAs. Similarly, each female Senator contributed 12 agenda items to the Orders of the Day against nine by male Senators. While all female Senators participated in their House's proceedings, a total of eight female MNAs did not participate in the House during the reporting period. In comparison to the male MNAs, female MNAs participation remained better, it added.

The report said thematically, the women parliamentarians sought discussions on a range of public importance issues, including inflation, energy supply and pricing, the performance of government departments, protection of women, children, and human rights, and law and order in the country. The legislative agenda put forward by women parliamentarians included health reforms, protection of workers' rights, governance and institutional reforms, along with constitutional amendments concerning women's rights, transgender rights, amendments to criminal laws for improved protection of women and children, it concluded.