Skip to main content

Yamina Meftali

Interviews

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on
Back
March 5, 2013

Yamina Meftali

Member of Parliament from Algeria

"I went into politics as a result of the emergence of the Islamist Movement in the nineties.  I was trying to find a way to help my country and contribute to the decision-making process as well as help women, who are usually the first to suffer. In 2002, at the age of 34, and until 2007, I served as a Member of Parliament; there were 23 women parliamentarians out of 398 Members of Parliament. I became Deputy Leader of the Caucus of the Majority Party and the Chairperson of the Parliament Standing Committee on Economy, Development and Trade. I returned to Parliament in 2012 (with a mandate until 2017) and at present I am member of its Legal Affairs Committee. In October 2012, in Canada, I was elected for a four-year term into the International Parliament. This could help me extend the scope of my work as a parliamentarian…   

I wish for my eldest daughter, aged 20, now a Law student, to enter politics. Politics should not remain monopolized by men.

In 2008, President Boutaflika introduced a Constitutional amendment by including Article 31, which stipulates a wider role for women in elected councils. This has helped promote women’s political participation and, in 2011, regulations were adopted to enforce Article 31, including the establishment of a quota system. Since then, women’s representation in the Parliament went up, from 7% to 32%, for the first time in an Arab Country…Algerian Women should join politics and prove their capabilities and hard work in order to reach a 50% representation.”

[[{"fid":"7329","view_mode":"default","fields":{"format":"default"},"type":"media","attributes":{}}]]

 

 

 

Date of Interview
Region
Member of Parliament from Algeria

"I went into politics as a result of the emergence of the Islamist Movement in the nineties.  I was trying to find a way to help my country and contribute to the decision-making process as well as help women, who are usually the first to suffer. In 2002, at the age of 34, and until 2007, I served as a Member of Parliament; there were 23 women parliamentarians out of 398 Members of Parliament. I became Deputy Leader of the Caucus of the Majority Party and the Chairperson of the Parliament Standing Committee on Economy, Development and Trade. I returned to Parliament in 2012 (with a mandate until 2017) and at present I am member of its Legal Affairs Committee. In October 2012, in Canada, I was elected for a four-year term into the International Parliament. This could help me extend the scope of my work as a parliamentarian…   

I wish for my eldest daughter, aged 20, now a Law student, to enter politics. Politics should not remain monopolized by men.

In 2008, President Boutaflika introduced a Constitutional amendment by including Article 31, which stipulates a wider role for women in elected councils. This has helped promote women’s political participation and, in 2011, regulations were adopted to enforce Article 31, including the establishment of a quota system. Since then, women’s representation in the Parliament went up, from 7% to 32%, for the first time in an Arab Country…Algerian Women should join politics and prove their capabilities and hard work in order to reach a 50% representation.”

[[{"fid":"7329","view_mode":"default","fields":{"format":"default"},"type":"media","attributes":{}}]]

 

 

 

Date of Interview
Region
Member of Parliament from Algeria

Upcoming Event:

National Intergenerational Dialogue on Advancing Youth Participation and Representation in Leadership and Decision-Making

The main purpose of the National Intergenerational Dialogue is to promote intergenerational interactions/exchanges to bridge generational divides and to address the causes of…

Explore
Event Countdown
Regional Dialogue on Advancing Transformative Gender Social Norms to Enhance Women and Youth Participation
Explore
Strategies and tools to support women in public life against gender-based violence online and offline
Explore