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`Women MPs have additional responsibilities'

There are lots of things to celebrate in the 50 years of Indian Parliament. As a woman Parliamentarian, I am proud of the fact that today, women MPs constitute 8 per cent of the total members. I am also elated that from the days of Sati to now, women have traversed a long way, says Renuka Chaudhury

Updated on: Sep 04, 2002 06:41 PM IST
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-Renuka Chaudhury

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HT Image

There are lots of things to celebrate in the 50 years of Indian Parliament. As a woman Parliamentarian, I am proud of the fact that today, women MPs constitute 8 per cent of the total members. I am also elated that from the days of Sati to now, women have traversed a long way, both within the House and without.

As a woman MP, there are many additional responsibilities I have to handle in my constituency…and with a smiling face. Marriage problems, divorces, settlements, harassment issues, postings and transfers, health and childcare problems, tribal issues and so on.

Things which I am nurturing in my constituency right now are micro-farming, whereby women creditors can set up small independent units and become self-sufficient, SSI or khadi schemes for villagers, land rights for women in farmer’s families and so on.

I sometimes feel that I am able to handle these issues better since I was a corporator first and a parliamentarian later. Perhaps when you handle real life situations as an administrator that you can deal with these issues wisely and ably.

There is however one thing I would like to point out, I have received tremendous cooperation from male colleagues in the House: I have learnt a lot from illustrious Parliamentarians like Jaswant Singh, L K Advani, Somnath Chatterjee, Indrajit Gupta, Geeta Mukherjee and so on.

I remember Singh dragging me to the notice office in my early days so that I could file my notices and then he would sit with me on the speeches. I am also completely comfortable working with Sonia Gandhi within the House and outside it.

On women’s reservation:

Reservation is not the correct word. It is like an entry point, members get 3 Lok Sabha terms by rotation. I can tell you that no male MP likes it…they think their male bastion will be affected.

Message to women who want to enter politics:

The best qualification is your commitment to politics, and anybody whose heart beats for India is eligible.

(as told to Nandini Guha)

 
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