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Female candidates were disappointed with the turnout rate of the 30 members of the Shura Committee, which elected 45 seats, with a turnout rate of 63.5%.
The results of Qatar’s first legislative committee election have been announced, and none of the 26 female candidates won the polls.
Citizens of Qatar voted for two-thirds of the seats on the advisory committee in the first legislative elections in the Gulf Arab states on Saturday, a process that has ignited domestic debates about electoral inclusiveness and citizenship.
The Shura Council has legislative power and approves general national policies and budgets, but has no say in formulating defense, security, economic, and investment policies for this small but wealthy natural gas producer, and it prohibits political parties from participating.
The Ministry of the Interior said in a statement on Sunday that the election turnout rate for 30 members of the 45-seat institution was 63.5%. The Emir will continue to appoint the remaining 15 members of the Council.
Results showed none of the women who were part of the polls was elected, disappointing candidates who had wanted to lend a voice for women and other Qataris in the country’s political process.
“It is not Qatar’s vision to own an owner,” said 59-year-old Aisha Hamam al-Jasim, a nursing manager operating in the Markhiya district of the capital Doha.
She urged Qatari women to start “expressing their faith” and vote for strong female candidates in the future.
Several female candidates have been seeking to improve the integration of the children of Qatari mothers married to foreigners into Qatari society. These foreigners, like other Gulf countries, cannot pass on Qatari nationality to their children.
The 34-year-old industrial engineer candidate Al-Maha Al-Majid participated in the election to change his mind.
“In order to persuade men [to vote for women]Yes, we may need to put in work or extra effort…I am willing to put in extra effort in order to enter and persuade this society that women can do this,” she said.
The election sparked a domestic debate about electoral inclusiveness and citizenship.
Under a law restricting voting to Qataris whose family was in the country before 1930, some members of a major tribe were not eligible to vote, which aroused tribal sensitivity.
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