TEHRAN, Iran – It's a statistic that belies claims of equality: women hold just 9 of Iran's 290 parliamentary seats. And they are highly unlikely to reverse the disparity in Friday's (February 26) elections.
Representation has never neared parity – 14 is the highest number of MPs ever elected – and it has prompted a campaign, "Changing the male face of parliament."
The group has set a target of 50 female lawmakers, a huge leap forward on the current 3% level of representation.
"Whether it be in parliament or the Assembly of Experts, we are seeking to tackle discrimination," female activist Jila Shariatpanahi, an author and leading member of the campaign, told Agence France-Presse.
The Assembly of Experts is a powerful committee of clerics that supervises the Islamic republic's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
The Guardian Council, a constitutional watchdog that vets election candidates, excluded all 16 women seeking one of the assembly's 88 seats, meaning the panel, which will pick Khamenei's successor when he dies, will remain men only.
Breaking the gender gap would not be unprecedented. The first Assembly of Experts after the Islamic revolution of 1979 included a woman, Monireh Gorji.
'We want 50%'
Women make up 50.4% of Iran's population, according to the last census.
But despite President Hassan Rouhani's cabinet having 3 female ministers, all vice presidents, women still dramatically lag behind men in high office.
Shariatpanahi, a physicist on Iran's nuclear program between 1975 and 1987, has studied Islamic texts closely and says their interpretation, not the actual words, is to blame.
"I have reached the conclusion that we need to present new interpretations. If we have this there won't be this much discrimination imposed on women on religious grounds," she said.
Rouhani's naming of 3 female vice presidents – holding the portfolios for women, legal affairs and the environment – was a positive step.
But with more women than men in university, Shariatpanahi says there can be no educational justification for the shortfall.
The campaign is urging female and male voters to back candidates who do not have an "anti-women record" in public office or in their careers.
"Our ultimate goal, over time, is to get 50% of parliament's members to be women," she said, stressing that age-old traditions must be broken down.
It will be a hard task.
Of the 6,229 candidates in Friday's parliamentary polls, only 586 – 9% – are women.
"We cannot make a sudden jump, it's more a case of step by step. First, there must be cultural change in the people, and then cultural change from officials," said Shariatpanahi.
'Traditionalists fear change'
The rival conservative and reformist blocs in the elections have sought to address the issue.
Six women are on the main "principlist" (conservative) list of 30 candidates vying for seats in Tehran, with 8 women on the reformist list, amounting to 20% and 27%, respectively.
Somayeh Tahmasebi, head of the women's section of "The List of Hope", a coalition backing Rouhani, a moderate, was among the women barred from running for the Assembly of Experts.
"Since the revolution our women have reached higher levels of education and achieved various specialities, but their demands have not been realized when compared to their qualifications," she said.
"Our officials, who are mainly men, need to reach this conclusion and offer positions more suitable to educated women. This requires cultural change."
The issue has resonated strongly in the election campaign, with a gathering of female reformists, many of them youths, chanting "Equal Rights for Women" at a pro-Rouhani gathering last week.
"Traditionalists exist in all societies and one of their characteristics is that they fear change, and fear what could replace them," said Tahmasebi, 52.
"They always think they will lose if the current situation is altered. But we hope reformists can manage this atmosphere better... and realize women's and youths' demands." – Arthur MacMillan, AFP / Rappler.com