Updated: Thursday August 29, 2013 MYT 7:29:51 AM
Fifty years of women's activism
Leading the way: Activists (from left) Datuk Ramani Gurusamy, Datuk Rasammah Bhupalan and Ho Yock Lin shared
 their experiences of advocating for women.
The National Council of Women’s Organisations (NCWO) has led the way in raising women’s status in Malaysia.
SHE has achieved many milestones for women’s rights in the past 60 years, but Datuk Rasammah Bhupalan is all too well
 aware of the work that is still not done, especially among underprivileged groups.
“We
 have come a long way. But how do we gauge the empowerment of women when
 we have only touched upper and middle-income women. What about the 
lower-income group? What have we brought to them?” said Rasammah, 86, 
who co-founded the National Council of Women’s Organisations (NCWO) 50 
years ago.
NCWO is the 
umbrella organisation, with 125 affiliates, working to raise women’s 
status in Malaysia. There is just no resting on the laurels for 
Rasammah, or for the other two women activists at NCWO’s Breakfast with 
Mentors session recently, held in conjuction with the organisation’s 
Golden Jubilee celebrations.
Rasammah,
 NCWO vice president Datuk
 Ramani Gurusamy, 72, and
 All Women’s Action Society (AWAM) president Ho Yock Lin, 58, are all 
veterans in Malaysia’s feminist movement, and they have worked hard to 
raise the standard of Malaysian women’s lives – from advocating for 
equal pay to amending legislation on rape, violence against women and 
custody rights, to creating awareness of breast cancer.
“In
 the 1960s, the fights were for bread and butter issues, like equal pay.
 Then, women became temporary teachers when they got married. They were 
also not eligible for pension,” recalled Ramani.
Fighting
 for equal pay for women teachers was “the first real struggle for women
 in Malaya”, said Rasammah who founded and headed the first Women 
Teachers Union in 1960. It was only in 1972 that women teachers finally 
received the same pay as their male peers.
Over
 the decades, women activists have lobbied to put women’s rights at the 
forefront of government policies, beginning with the establishment of 
the Women’s Advisory Council in 1976 to maximise women’s participation 
in Malaysia’s development.
In
 1983, the Secretariat for Women’s Affairs, Hawa, was set up under the 
Prime Minister’s Department ensure women have equal opportunities, and a
 National Policy on Women was adopted in 1989. They paved the way for 
the setting up of the Women’s Ministry in 2001; it was the culmination 
of many decades of advocating for women’s issues to be integrated into 
all public policies. These milestones in the women’s movement were 
documented in NCWO 50 Years Remembered, a book to commemorate NCWO’s 50th Anniversary (pic).
One
 of the most important tasks undertaken by activists was in changing 
legislations that were discriminatory towards women. In 1985, NCWO 
brought together women’s organisations and identified laws that 
discriminated against women.
“Amending
 legislation is a long-drawn process. We worked on reforming laws
 on rape and domestic violence, custody and guardianship of children, 
inheritence and property rights. We also lobbied for maternity leave to 
be extended from 42 days to 60 days, and to 90 days in 2010,” recalled 
Ramani.
She recounted how
 women activists networked with their Canadian counterparts to change 
how rape cases were handled in the 1980s. “We helped set up the first 
One-Stop Rape Crisis Centre in Hospital Kuala Lumpur in1994, and put 
together a rape investigation kit. I remember we went to see the 
Inspector General of Police Tun Hanif Omar to lobby for the setting up 
of a special unit of women police officers to investigate rape cases, 
and it was set up in 1986,” said Ramani, who also cited amendments to 
the Domestic Violence Act which came into effect in 1996 as another 
important achievement.
Although
 much
 has been done in the past 50 years, the three women activists 
emphasised that so much more needs to be done. Rasammah pointed out 
there is still not enough women representation in Parliament, or debates
 focused on women.
“We 
must not be afraid to fight for change. I grew up questioning 
institutions and justices, and learnt about women’s rights in the UK 
where I was studying. I remembered reading about the women’s teachers 
union activism at that time (1960s),” recalled Ho, who cited how they 
fought for the age limit for statutuory rape to be raised from below 14 
to 16.
At 58, Ho joked 
that she was the “youngest” at the panel, but the three women activists 
certainly presented an energetic session to their young audience. 
Rasammah is feisty and unwavering in her commitment to the women’s 
cause,
 and Ramani spoke
 of how she continues to be motivated to work for marginalised women.
Most
 importantly, they said there is no standing on the sidelines. “We need 
young, fresh blood in the women’s movement. We need your excitement, 
your passion and your commitment. So, prepare yourself to get into the 
movement. Get the leadership skills you need, and you probably already 
have them. Get into an organisation. Now, with the Internet, you can see
 what an organisation is all about. See what are the issues that 
interest you and get involved. We need you,” said Ramani.
Rasammah
 said it’s essential to be active in an organisation, even if it’s only 
for two hours a week, or even a fortnight. They also need men to be 
involved in the women’s cause, said Ho who cited the success of NCWO’s 
MenCare campaign which engaged
 men to encourage
 women to screen for breast cancer.
For more information on NCWO and for enquiries on its 50th Anniversary book, visit ncwomalaysia.org.my.

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