NGOs back 'quality' women candidates
NGOs back 'quality' women candidates
A. Junaidi, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
Non-government organizations have assisted 25 women in their bid
to become legislators in upcoming elections.
The NGOs, including the Center for Electoral Reform (Cetro)
and the Concerned Indonesian Women's Movement (GPPI) say the
legislative candidates are worth assisting because they are
quality candidates.
"But it doesn't mean that other woman candidates are not
good," Francisca "Eri" Seda of Cetro said on Tuesday.
Political parties were expected to field at least 30 percent
of women candidates for the April 5 legislative election but only
two out of 24 parties actually did.
Eri said the 25 women had passed a two-month selection process
out of 84 nominees. The process gauged the level of their concern
on issues of democratization, human rights, civilian supremacy
and women's empowerment.
The NGOs will provide each candidate with campaign funding of
between Rp 3 million (US$352) and Rp 16 million.
"We will also pay for a radio advertising campaign for the 25
women across the country," Eri said, adding that the fund was
secured from a fund-raising night conducted by the NGOs last
month. The campaign period will be from March 11 to April 1.
Maria Ulfa Anshor, a candidate from the National Awakening
Party (PKB), said she would use the Rp 10 million fund to finance
a water pump and public toilet projects in two villages in the
West Java town of Indramayu.
"We hope that it will be useful for the people. Although
probably many voters would prefer T-shirts to the projects,"
Maria who is also the chairperson of the country's largest Muslim
Organization Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) women's wing Fatayat, said.
Sarah Leary Mboeik said she would use the Rp 16 million fund
to finance water projects in an East Nusa Tenggara village.
Other recipients included Grace Papare Rumansara, a candidate
from the New Indonesia Alliance Party (PPIB) of Papua and Maria
Ulfa Anshor from PKB of West Java, Eva K.S. from the Indonesian
Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) of East Java and Asmaniar
from the National Mandate Party (PAN) in West Kalimantan.
Wooing voters through community projects has been a common
mode of campaigning, notably by the ruling Golkar party in the
three decades of Soeharto's regime ending in 1998.