Women's Rights

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United Nation has also declared that the minimum benchmark for women representation should be 30% . The responsibility falls upon the government to safeguard the liberties for women to vote, to be part of formulation of national policies and to join political organizations as they wish . Hence, this shows clearly that the government and the legislature are to formulate regulations and policies that encourage and safeguard the liberties of women to engage themselves in the political movements and administration of the country. However, Malaysian government still need to work on said task as Malaysian women have yet to receive equal rights in terms of their political lives. The fact that Malaysian women are not much involved in the domain …show more content…

Malaysian women’s political rights should be made equal and be safeguarded not because men in the House has ever acted in a way that has harmed the ladies, but because the females are exposed to such a risk of not able to fight and argue on equal grounds in the House when they are required to do so, due to the domination of the Cabinet and Political Institutions by men. This shows that the women’s rights in terms of political involvement is restricted and …show more content…

Firstly, it is clearly stated during the international conference that women should be allowed to decide on the issue whether they are going to give birth, apart from conducting family planning with their respective spouses. However in Malaysia, only 50% of females nationally have the access to contraception options when they need it. In a survey conducted by the Reproductive Rights Advocacy Alliance of Malaysia (hereinafter known as RRAAM), approximately 40% of the doctors nationwide are refusing or reluctant to provide medical abortion or alternatives of contraception to females, especially those who are pregnant due to rape. This unveils the unprofessionalism and prejudice of the medical workers towards the women, disallowing them to access their rights to healthcare. Besides, there are insufficient trained and experienced doctors to date to perform the complex medical procedure, not to mention about their fallacies about contraception and abortion being illegal processes in Malaysia. Hence, it is clear that Malaysian women’s rights are inconsistent with the standard laid down in the

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