Where Indian women lead, a better life follows

Mon Mar 5, 2007 12:01pm EST
 
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By Bappa Majumdar

KANAIPUR, India (Reuters) - Every morning 10-year-old Indian villager Nipa Haldar crosses a canal in a small boat and trudges along a mud road for 20 minutes to reach school, pursuing her dream of becoming a nurse.

Nipa has not missed classes once in three years, just one of hundreds of young children in Kanaipur village in the eastern state of West Bengal to have benefited from a law that promotes the involvement of women in local politics.

"I want to become a nurse and help all the poor and ailing people when I grow up," she says as she heads for classes about 70 km (40 miles) from the state capital, Kolkata.

In 2004, a newly elected village council, or panchayat, in Kanaipur included for the first time a representative number of women -- and resulted in a mini social revolution.

In addition to their new clout in village affairs, the move also sprouted a number of self-help groups.

Together they have improved the provision of healthcare and education for women and children, according to a study by UNICEF of 165 villages in West Bengal.

"The number of visits by health workers in these villages was significantly higher and the desire to do good work by women leaders had a ripple effect on everyone else," Priyanka Khanna, a UNICEF spokeswoman, told Reuters in Kolkata.

That may not be radical -- micro-credit pioneers have been saying for years that one of the best ways to chip away at rural poverty is too give women control of project purse strings -- but in India it marks a milestone.

With 70 percent of a billion-plus population living in a patchwork of poor villages and small towns in India, these grass-roots changes have a significant impact.

FEMALE TOUCH

In 1993, India amended its constitution to accommodate the concept of panchayati raj -- effectively village self-governance -- and make laws out of its previously non-binding rules.

Among the changes was the reservation of one-third of seats on every village council for women.

In West Bengal, ruled by the world's longest-serving elected communist government, moves to boost the role of women began in the 1970s. The constitution change added impetus and by the time the UNICEF study was completed the results were there to be seen.

"Women come out of the shell once they see that someone from the same gender is fighting for them and that impacts the entire household and the village," says Kolkata-based sociologist Prasanta Roy.

The survey revealed that in areas where women had taken up their allocated places on councils, investment in clean drinking water had doubled compared to those still run solely by men.  Continued...

 
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