
IUML opens doors to women in national leadership. Why Jayanthi Rajan breaks many ceilings
For the first time in its history, the Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) has inducted women into its national leadership, including a non-Muslim face.
Jayanthi Rajan, a Dalit leader from Kerala, and Fathima Muzaffer from Tamil Nadu, both members of the IUML women's wing, were chosen by the party Thursday to become national assistant secretaries in its national council. Their names were announced at a meeting in Chennai, which also saw the IUML elect a national president and other office-bearers.
The induction of the two women faces is expected to help the IUML shed its image of a 'male-dominated party'. An ally of the Congress, the IUML has often wrestled with juggling between the growing demand for better women's representation in the party and the conservatism advocated by Muslim clerics.
In 2021, Haritha, the women's wing of the IUML's Muslim Students Federation (MSF), had held protests over gender-related issues within the party. After this, the IUML had set up a 20% representation benchmark for women in all its affiliated groups.
Last year, the IUML inducted women into the state leadership of the Youth League, the party's youth wing, for the first time.
The 46-year-old Rajan, who hails from Wayanad and belongs to a family of 'Congress supporters', began her journey with the IUML in the 2010 local body elections, which were the first after 50% seats in these bodies were reserved for women. The IUML looked for eligible women beyond the Muslim community to field, and this led them to Rajan for a ward under the Poothadi panchayat in Wayanad. Rajan by then was already active in social work.
Rajan told The Indian Express: 'In 2004, I began my career with a Church-run NGO, which was involved in women's empowerment through micro-financing and self-help groups. The IUML was also involved in a lot of charitable works in the area and that helped me find beneficiaries… Their involvement in charity and social causes influenced me.'
Rajan won the local body elections as an IUML representative, and simultaneously joined the party's Women's League, going on to become a member of its Wayanad district committee. She was later nominated to the state committee of the Dalit League, which is a wing within the IUML. In 2015, she contested elections to the block panchayat and won.
'For the last nine years, I have been in the national committee of the Women's League. I have never felt odd in the party. The leadership of the IUML or Women's League has never approached me as a non-Muslim person,' she said, adding that things had changed since. 'When I joined the Women's League, there were very few Muslim women in the IUML or its affiliated outfits. Now, we have several educated women in the party.'
On conservative clergy and their objections to women in public places, Rajan said, 'I am only part of the IUML, I need not comment on what the clerics say. In fact, I have shared the dais with clerics too.'
While the reservation of 50% seats for women in local bodies may have led the IUML to open the doors to women candidates at this level, the party has had very few women candidates for Assembly or Lok sabha elections. In the 2021 Kerala Assembly elections, the party fielded a woman candidate, advocate Noorbeena Rasheed, from the Kozhikode South constituency, for the first time in 25 years. Rasheed, however, lost the seat to a candidate of the Indian National League.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India.com
40 minutes ago
- India.com
Neither China's J-10, nor US' F-15, Turkey makes biggest deal with India's friend... to deliver 48 fighter jets by..., country is...
After Turkey drones failed in Operation Sindoor, Erdagon makes biggest deal with India's friend... to deliver 48 fighter jets by... Even after failure of its drones in the recent Operation Sindoor, Turkey has signed a defence deal with the world's largest Muslim country. Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Instagram announced to give 48 KAAN fighter jets to Indonesia. This is Turkey's first combat aircraft, which flew for the first time last year. Biggest defense deal in Turkey's history Turkey compares its fighter jet to US' F-16 jet. Regarding this deal, Erdogan said that Indonesia's local capabilities will also be used in the production of this fighter jet. He said that this agreement will prove beneficial for Turkey and Indonesia. This is a $10 billion agreement which is one of the biggest defense contracts in Turkey's history. KAAN fighter jet took off last year Regarding this deal, Erdogan said, 'I wish continued success to all the companies to whom we have given every kind of support to further strengthen our defense industry.' This aircraft, built by Turkiye Aerospace Industries (TAI), took its first flight last year at a speed of 230 knots and 8000 feet. This defense deal is a big deal for Turkey because last month India had exposed its weapons to the world under Operation Sindoor. Under Operation Sindoor, India had entered Pakistan and destroyed terrorist hideouts. In response to which Pakistan had made an unsuccessful attempt to attack Indian military bases using Turkey's drones. China had offered J-10 fighter jet India destroyed all the Turkish drones in the sky, after which Erdogan's defense industries were exposed to the world. Indonesia has also bought Rafale jets from France before this. Earlier, Indonesia's retired Air Marshal Doni Irmawan Taufanto claimed that China has offered them J-10 fighter jets. He said that China has offered us not only J-10 fighter jets but also weapons and warships.
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
43 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Colombia prez bypasses lawmakers, issues decree for vote on labour reform
Colombian President Gustavo Petro on Wednesday bypassed legislative opposition and signed a decree summoning voters to the polls in August to decide changes to the country's labour laws, including whether work days should be limited to eight hours. The decree fulfilled Petro's threat to Congress to put his labour system overhaul before voters should senators not approve the 12-question referendum themselves. He issued the measure in a tense political climate following the Saturday shooting of opposition senator and presidential candidate Miguel Uribe Turbay during a public event. The referendum has become the crux of long-running tensions between the executive and legislative branches. After Congress rejected Petro's labour reform twice, most recently in March, he sent lawmakers a 12-question referendum proposal on May 1 as Colombian law requires that the Senate rule on the advisability of referendums. The legislative body two weeks later voted 49-47 against the measure, prompting Petro to accuse lawmakers of fraud. Petro, Colombia's first leftist president, has accused Congress of working against the interest of workers and has asked them to demonstrate across the country. The referendum's questions include whether workers should receive double pay if they work during holidays; whether daytime workdays should end at 6 pm; and whether open-ended contracts should be offered to workers to prioritise job stability. The disagreements between Petro and Congress date back to the start of his term in 2022, but they have heightened as he seeks to consolidate his legacy ahead of next year's legislative and presidential elections. Uribe remained in critical condition on Wednesday following his shooting in broad daylight Saturday during a political rally in the capital, Bogota. Authorities investigating the motive have not ruled out the possibility that it was a targeted attack on the opposition. They are also considering whether it was an attempt to destabilise the current government, or retaliation by illegal armed groups. In anticipation of court challenges, Petro on Wednesday said his government will send the decree to Colombia's Constitutional Court for review. At the same time, the Council of State is considering a lawsuit seeking to annul the Senate's vote.


Hindustan Times
an hour ago
- Hindustan Times
'Judicial activism shouldn't turn into judicial terrorism': CJI BR Gavai
Chief Justice of India BR Gavai has emphasised that judicial activism is bound to stay, but it should not be turned into judicial terrorism. CJI Gavai said the power of judicial review should be used sparingly and only if a statute is violative of the basic structure of the Constitution. "Judicial activism is bound to stay. At the same time, judicial activism should not be turned into judicial terrorism. So, at times, you try to exceed the limits and try to enter into an area where normally the judiciary should not enter," Gavai said in response to a question from a legal news portal. Gavai described the Constitution as a "quiet revolution etched in ink" and a transformative force that not only guarantees rights but actively uplifts the historically oppressed. Speaking at the Oxford Union in London on the theme 'From Representation to Realisation: Embodying the Constitution's Promise' on Tuesday, the CJI, the second Dalit and the first Buddhist to hold India's highest judicial office, highlighted the positive impact of the Constitution on marginalised communities and gave his example to drive home the point. "Many decades ago, millions of citizens of India were called 'untouchables'. They were told they were impure. They were told that they did not belong. They were told that they could not speak for themselves. "But here we are today, where a person belonging to those very people is speaking openly, as the holder of the highest office in the judiciary of the country," the CJI said.