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First lady promotes rights for women

SOUTHERN SHUNEH, Jordan -Women need to have more prominence in government and business in the Middle East, Laura Bush said Saturday, in a bold appeal to an international audience that included some of the ministers and other men who hold political and economic power in the region.

America's first lady said women already have achieved extraordinary gains in the Middle East and that change must come to any nation that wants to be considered truly free.

Women who have not yet won these rights are watching

she said at the World Economic Forum conference on the Middle East. They are calling on the conscience of their countrymen making it clear that if the right to vote is to have any meaning it cannot be limited only to men.

She had shied from the spotlight in President Bush's first term, but Laura Bush embraced a public role on behalf of women's rights at a conference attended by 1,300 international business and political leaders.

With anti-American sentiment running high in the region, Mrs. Bush called upon the American tradition of respect for all religions. She also sought to equate the struggle of Middle Eastern women for freedom with such movements in U.S. history.

In my country

women didn't secure the right to vote until more than a century after its founding

she said.

She said the Middle East and the broader world is now at a historic moment

a time of unprecedented opportunity.

Women now can vote in all Middle Eastern nations that have elections, except Saudi Arabia. The Persian Gulf nations of Bahrain, Qatar and Oman all have had their first elections in recent years and have allowed women to participate.

Yet a report released Saturday at the forum found that women in the region face discrimination in practically every institution of society, including the legal system, the economy, education, health care and the media.

The inequities exist even though the concept of equal rights is in every Middle Eastern constitution, except in Saudi Arabia, which earned the lowest rating in the study by Freedom House, a nonpartisan group based in Washington that works to expand political and economic freedom around the world.

Jordan's Queen Rania, a women's rights activist and World Economic Forum founding board member, said Saturday that her country has tried to put in place positive changes for its women by revising the country's laws and legal structure. But the endeavor was thwarted by traditionalists, especially on thorny issues such as honor crimes, which involve retribution against women viewed as guilty of moral impropriety.

Freedom

especially freedom for women

is more than the absence of oppression

Bush said. It's the right to speak and vote and worship freely. Human rights require the rights of women.

She said she was delighted that Kuwait last week extended the right to vote to women, a reference that drew the only outburst of applause that interrupted her speech.

Bush cited the strides that women have made in Afghanistan since the U.S.-led coalition toppled the Taliban government, which barred girls from attending school or women from working.

That is a terrible injustice

and it's unacceptable in any society

she said, noting that most of the people in the Middle East and northern Africa who are illiterate are women.

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