Women This Week: First Women’s Political Party Launched in Iraq
from Women Around the World and Women and Foreign Policy Program
from Women Around the World and Women and Foreign Policy Program

Women This Week: First Women’s Political Party Launched in Iraq

Women show their ink-stained fingers during Kurds independence referendum in Sulaimaniyah, Iraq September 25, 2017.
Women show their ink-stained fingers during Kurds independence referendum in Sulaimaniyah, Iraq September 25, 2017. REUTERS/Alaa Al-Marjani

Welcome to “Women Around the World: This Week,” a series that highlights noteworthy news related to women and U.S. foreign policy. This week’s post covers July 26 to August 1. 

July 31, 2025 2:52 pm (EST)

Women show their ink-stained fingers during Kurds independence referendum in Sulaimaniyah, Iraq September 25, 2017.
Women show their ink-stained fingers during Kurds independence referendum in Sulaimaniyah, Iraq September 25, 2017. REUTERS/Alaa Al-Marjani
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Blog posts represent the views of CFR fellows and staff and not those of CFR, which takes no institutional positions.

Thousands Join to Boost Women’s Participation in Politics 

Ahead of Iraq’s upcoming parliamentary elections in November, women politicians and political activists have launched the Arab country’s first women’s political party. After two years of waiting for official licensing approval, the al-Mawadda Women’s Party has issued a platform that seeks to unite women across Iraq and increase their political participation. Al-Mawaddah is an Arabic term from the Qur’an, symbolizing compassion, love, and respect. Jihan al-Taei, the secretary-general and founder of the party, said to Rudaw, “Women constitute more than half of Iraqi society. Our party was established due to the marginalized role of women and their genuine exclusion from all areas of life, especially from decision-making.” Per Iraqi law, at least one-third of a political party’s membership must be male. With over seven thousand members across Iraq and the Kurdistan Region, Taei will rely on “people’s belief” of women’s role in decision-making to garner more support. To campaign, the party has begun organizing programming, including awareness workshops and an online portal for media membership.   

Russia Called to Investigate Modern-Day Slavery of Migrant Women 

This week, independent experts hired by the United Nations sounded the alarm on allegations of women and girls being trafficked from Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan to Russia for labor. The report documents trafficking practices that have been used since the 1990s to lure women to Russia with the promise of employment. Upon arrival, the women are forced to work in the Golyanovo district of Moscow under inhumane conditions with no pay. Victims are held captive and subjected to extreme torture and exploitation, including sexual violence and rape. “These women were isolated, abused, and stripped of all autonomy. The scale and duration of the abuse, coupled with the authorities’ failure to act despite repeated complaints, point to a deeply entrenched system of exploitation,” the experts wrote in the report, which called on Russia to investigate in coordination with Uzbek and Kazakh authorities. The report comes after a recent case at the European Court of Human Rights brought by five women who were trafficked. The court ruled unanimously that Russia violated Article 4 of the European Convention on Human Rights to prevent trafficking and protect victims.   

Women’s National Basketball Team Negotiates for Pay Parity 

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Elections and Voting

Women's Political Leadership

Human Trafficking

Inequality

Sexual Violence

Last week, players from the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) came out to play in t-shirts printed with “Pay Us What You Owe Us” at the All-Star game held in Indianapolis on July 19. Their demonstration came on the heels of the most recent collective bargaining negotiations, where the league wants to continue having a fixed percentage salary structure. Alternatively, the players are pushing for their salaries to adopt a new model of revenue sharing that would reflect increased income from the WNBA’s rising popularity. Since 2019, the WNBA has doubled its revenue from $102 million to $200 million and has since hit records for merchandise sales and viewership. Currently, WNBA players see only 9.3 percent of revenue in their paycheck, compared to the NBA, where male players see between 49 and 51 percent of league income. “We want a piece of the entire pie. Not a piece of part of the pie,” said Los Angeles Sparks guard Kelsey Plum. “We’re a resilient group. We know the unity it takes to be able to [get] the outcome desired.” 

 

Janelle Umana-Limon is the intern for the Women and Foreign Policy Program and contributed to the research for this post.

More on:

Elections and Voting

Women's Political Leadership

Human Trafficking

Inequality

Sexual Violence

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