
Nawal al-Samarraie, Photo by Karim Kadim
Iraqi Women’s Minister Resigns, Draws Support
by Corey Flintoff, NPR, February 12, 2009
Women in Iraq’s parliament have rallied behind the country’s minister for women’s affairs, who resigned earlier this week saying she was frustrated by a lack of support from the government.
The resignation highlights the plight of many Iraqi women, especially widows created by the country’s decades of war.
Nawal al-Samarraie had served as Iraq’s minister for women’s affairs for less than six months when she created a stir by turning in her resignation. She complained she had never received support from the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, and that her budget for projects had been slashed from about $7,500 a month to around $1,500.
“I think it is wrong to stay as a minister without doing anything for my people, especially in this time and in this situation of Iraqi women — we have an army of widows, violated women, detainees, illiteracy and unemployment — many, many problems. I had to resign,” she said. Continue reading Iraqi Women’s Minister Resigns, Draws Support






