Days before Int'l Women’s Day: Pro-women bills nixed

Among bills voted down by ministers was bill to end abortion approval c'tees, bill proposing appointment of women’s issues consultants.

Two days before International Women’s Day, the Ministerial Committee on Legislation in it’s Sunday meeting failed to pass a series of bills aimed at promoting women’s issues.
It is customary for the committee to debate such bills ahead of International Women’s Day, and in recent years, significant measures were passed helping women gain workplace equality and strengthening enforcement against sex offenders. This year, however, four out of the six bills fell and voting on the two others was postponed by two months.
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Among the bills that were voted down or postponed were ones to end abortion approval committees, proposing the appointment of women’s issues consultants in public bodies and reducing the minimum work hours of single mothers.
One bill that did pass and thus will receive government support calls to freeze the automatic increase of women’s pension age from 62 to 64, pending the formation of a professional committee to look in to the matter.
Shirley Shlomiuk-Babai, legal counsel for the Israel Women’s Network, said that the fact that none of the bills proposed in conjunction with International Women’s Day passed was highly regrettable and was a step backwards from the success of previous years.
“Women in Israel are discriminated against and we are not seeing enough being done to change that, either by legislation of new laws to protect their rights or in enforcement of existing laws,” Shlomiuk–Babai said.
“In past years we saw a concerted effort to pass bills and laws, as well as reach pro-women cabinet decisions, during the period before and after International Women’s Day. Unfortunately this year that didn’t happen.”
Shlomiuk–Babai said her organization would continue to attend Knesset committee meetings and lobby hard for women’s rights year round, and that she hoped to see more concrete support from the elected officials in the future.
“For our part we will do everything to advance our agenda and hope that the government doesn’t torpedo it,” she said.
In a non-related vote, the ministers approved a bill proposed by Habayit Hayehudi MK Uri Orbach that would prohibit discrimination based on place of residence.
The bill aims to rectify a situation where goods and services providers refuse to deliver their wares to certain destinations, such as settlements in the West Bank, or if they do, charge extra for it.
The bill states that it will be determined to be discrimination when a company refuses to provide a service to a given place and agrees to provide service to another place located an equal distance away.