Tunisia: Fight for gender equality continues despite new Constitution

By Ana Martinez, 12 April 2014
A Tunisian sign-bearer's message reads: "When everything becomes small, women remain strong." Amine Ghrabi / Flickr / CC
A Tunisian sign-bearer's message reads: "When everything becomes small, women remain strong." Amine Ghrabi / Flickr / CC
<div class="content-body"><p> After more than two years of arguments and concessions between Islamic and secular parties, on January 26, the Tunisian National Constituent Assembly ratified the country’s new Constitution.</p> <p> When it was signed, assembly members spontaneously started to chant the national anthem and congratulated each other for the achievement. Indeed, there was cause for celebration. Tunisians signed one of the most progressive Constitutions in the Arab world, one that includes a commitment to gender equality. Yet, the celebratory media coverage failed to mention that other Arab countries, such as Algeria and Morocco, have also committed to gender equality in their Constitution.
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