| Abortion Pill 
Vote.  
    [Australia] 
Australia
's Senate has voted to take control of a controversial abortion pill
    away from the government.  The current system means the RU486 pill is effectively
    banned in Australia.  
Under proposed legislation, which now passes
to the House of
    Representatives, the state medical regulatory body would decide when the pill can be
    used.  Proponents believe that body, the Therapeutic Goods Administration, will
    follow the lead of other regulatory bodies around the world and allow it. | 
  
    | After
    the Battle the Winning Women Drink a Toast, Decorously.  [Australia] With a clink
    of champagne flutes, the female politicians who campaigned to give Australian women access
    to the abortion pill toasted their victory yesterday.  But even in the
historic
    moment, they were nervous about appearances - too much joy on the touchy topic of abortion
    could be misconstrued.  Yet despite attempts to keep the tone low-key,
they were
    clearly elated - and they had cause to be.  In just three months, a small group of
    female backbenchers, some from minor parties, and a lone female minister overturned a
    decade-old law - against the wishes of the Prime Minister.  It was no mean feat.
      "It's a good day for common sense," declared Workforce Participation
    Minister Sharman Stone, who unleashed the debate when she was unable to help
 a young
    constituent find a doctor to perform a termination in country Victoria.  Dr Stone,
    who was then parliamentary secretary for finance, took at look at the statistics on
    funding for terminations - and realised that in some parts of the country it
 was becoming
    impossible to secure one. | 
  
    | New
    Quest for Female MPs.  [Australia] Having barely caught their breath since
    Thursday's historic vote to reverse the ban on the abortion pill, the female
 senators who
    led that campaign are already contemplating their next quest.  Democrats senator Lyn
    Allison plans to hit the phones today to see if more common ground can be found for a
    redesign of the nation's child-care system.  Only last month, Liberal MP Jackie Kelly
    branded the system a shambles and urged major reform.  "I agree with Jackie
    Kelly on this," Senator Allison said. "The child-care system is a shemozzle
     there are chronic shortages, a lot of perverse incentives and many children are
    simply missing out on good early childhood development."  Labor senator Claire
    Moore also nominated child care as an issue that could bring together women
from different
    parties in "strong agreement". | 
  
    | List
    of Female-Friendly Firms Growing.  [Australia] A registered club where women can
    work split shifts to fit in with caring responsibilities is among organisations officially
    dubbed "female friendly".  Mt Pritchard and District Community Club in
    southwest Sydney, 
better known as Mounties, is among 113 organisations on this year's
    Employer of Choice for Women Citation List.  It is put together by the
Federal
    Government's Equal Opportunity for Women in the Workplace Agency (EOWA).  The
    citation recognises female-friendly groups, bodies or firms that have outstanding
    initiatives to attract, retain and promote women.  Since it was introduced in 2001,
    the list has doubled in size and this year includes organisations from a variety of
    industries, including manufacturing, IT, finance, law, community services, education and
    hospitality. | 
  
    | Women's
    Dislike of Debate Over Feminism is Embarrassing.  [Australia] It's one of the
    great ironies of Australian feminism.  Despite 40 years of maturation,
we still play
    the man and not the ball.  We can't help ourselves.  Well before we consider the
    content and ruminate on the argument a woman might pose, we sharpen our squint, asking,
    "But who is she?"  In the case of New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd,
    the collective answer seems to be: she's a powerful, sexy little fox who's smart, witty,
    made it to the top and has got it all sewn up.  She's a bitch.  The Australian
    media response to Dowd's new book, Are Men Necessary?, has been a fascinating study in our
    own thinly disguised insecurities as women - and Antipodean women at that.  Our
    distaste for any debate that pokes and challenges our increasingly feeble feminist
    foundations and our inability to laugh at a witty line and appreciate a sassy joke is,
    well, embarrassing. | 
  
    | Interest
    Aroused in a Female Love Drug.  [Australia] Scientists are on a multi-billion-
    dollar quest to find a drug to arouse female sexual desire.  More than
20 drugs are
    being developed to meet the needs of women seeking to overcome the effects of long working
    hours and family pressures.  While drugs for male sexual dysfunction, such as Viagra,
    work by chemical stimulation of the sexual organs, the treatments being devised for women
    act on receptors in the brain.  Trials of Viagra on women by the manufacturer Pfizer
    found that it had little effect on a woman's libido.  Stimulating the parts of the
    brain responsible for female sexual excitement is a challenge for pharmaceutical firms. | 
  
    | Pregnancy Delays Bill on
    Succession.  [Japan] 
The Japanese government Wednesday backed away from its push
    for quick passage of a bill that would allow an empress to take the throne,
following the
    announcement that a princess is pregnant - possibly with the Japanese royal
family's first
    male heir in four decades.  Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi of Japan appealed in
    Parliament Tuesday for speedy passage, but a day later said it was no longer
 a priority
    and urged cautious debate on the idea, which has drawn fierce opposition from supporters
    of the male-only imperial law.  "It's desirable that the legislation be enacted
    when everyone can support it," Koizumi said at a parliamentary committee hearing.
    "Now public opinion is split, and I would like to deal with the issue carefully. | 
  
    | Support
    for Female Emperors Drops.  [Japan] Although 66 percent of voters would accept
    legal changes to allow female emperors, 60 percent also thought the government acted
    appropriately by delaying legislation for such a change, an Asahi Shimbun survey showed.
     The telephone poll, in which 1,979 randomly selected voters from around the country
    gave valid answers over the weekend, also showed that 60 percent accepted the idea of
    children of female emperors ascending the Chrysanthemum throne.  Prime
Minister
    Junichiro Koizumi had initially planned to submit a bill to the current Diet
 session that
    ends in June to revise the Imperial House Law.  The revision would have
 allowed the
    first-born child, regardless of sex, to become emperor as well as ascension
through the
    female lineage.  The current Imperial House Law only allows male emperors through the
    male lineage.  Debate about the issue emerged over concerns that no male babies have
    been born into the imperial family for about 40 years.  But Koizumi decided against
    submitting the bill after news broke earlier this month that Princess Kiko,
the wife of
    the emperor's second son, is pregnant, with the baby due in autumn. | 
  
    | Big Sister Shakes Up Islam
    Rule.  [Malaysia
] Sometimes it seems that Zainah Anwar - articulate, a little
    brassy, a presence wherever she goes - singlehandedly keeps the flame for women's rights
    alive in Malaysia, a 
country that sells itself as the model of a progressive Muslim
    society.  With the acid touch that has made her an accomplished campaigner, Anwar
    calls the officials in the government religious departments "those Taliban-minded
    bureaucrats."  Then, skittering back from the precipice, she notes
 that nearly
    50 percent of Malaysian women work, some in top jobs, including the governor
 of the
    Central Bank.  Anwar, Malaysian- and American-educated and one of her nation's best
    known figures, is the founder of Sisters in Islam - sassily known as SIS - a
 feminist
    group that lobbies for justice for women, always within the framework of Islam and the
    words of the Koran.  In doing so, she confronts the conundrum that is Malaysia, a
    relatively prosperous, politically stable nation of 24 million, yet where powerful Islamic
    Affairs Departments in the 13 states administer Shariah courts that control
matters of
    marriage, divorce and death.  In her latest victory, Anwar forced the government to
    step back from new amendments to the family law that would have allowed easier polygamy
    and divorce for men. | 
  
    | Female Suicide Rises by
    25% in a Year.  [New 
Zealand] Women are behaving more like men
and a tragic
    consequence is sharply increasing rates of suicides by females, experts say.
  The
    latest available national suicide figures made public yesterday, for 2003, show a 25 per
    cent increase in female suicides in one year.  In 2002, 113 females took their own
    life.  For the following year that figure had climbed to 141.  The grim set of
    figures was announced yesterday by Associate Health Minister Jim Anderton.  In total,
    515 people died by suicide in 2003  up from 465 in 2002.  Men's figures
    continued to be high, with 374 deaths  compared with 352 the previous
year.
     The figures have sparked calls for more up-to-date information on suicide.
     Self-inflicted deaths remain New 
Zealand's main cause of fatal injuries, eclipsing
    even the road death toll of 461 in 2003. | 
  
    | 20% of Female
    Hotel Workers are Smokers.  [Taiwan] The Taipei City Government
 released a survey
    yesterday showing that close to 20 percent of female hotel workers are smokers, as opposed
    to 9.52 percent of adult women overall.  Among the smokers, close to 59
 percent were
    under 39 years old. More than 64 percent of them consume at least half a pack of
    cigarettes a day.  The participants, however, were divided on the idea
of banning
    smoking in work places.  While 50.8 percent said that smoking should be
 banned in
    offices, 46.2 percent said smoking should be allowed in designated areas. The survey,
    jointly conducted by National Taiwan Normal 
University and Zhongshan District 
Health Center
    last year, focused on studies of smoking habits among 6,000 female employees
 working at
    over 20 large hotels in Taipei
 City's Zhongshan 
District. | 
  
    | `V-Day'
    Calls for Abuse of Women to be Stopped.  [Taiwan] Valentine's Day has come and
    gone, marked by a flurry of activity promoted by commercial interests such as florists,
    chocolate makers, motel owners, condom manufacturers, sponsors of lovers' kissing contests
    and so on.  Given the massive interest of Taiwan's media in the holiday, it was
    strange that "V-Day," a global movement to stop violence against women and girls
    that is also held on Feb. 14, got hardly a single mention.  V-Day was established in
    1998 by US 
playwright and feminist activist Eve Ensler, as an extension
of her play The
    Vagina Monologues, which is a collection of personal accounts based on interviews with
    more than 200 women of various ethnic groups, religious beliefs, age groups,
 sexual
    orientations and social classes.  The play is arranged in 18 segments on different
    themes, such as sexual frigidity, rape and birth.  The Vagina Monologues was
    originally produced and performed by Ensler in an award-winning run in 1996.
  Last
    year, Taiwanese students from National 
Chi Nan 
University and participants from the Garden
    of Hope Foundation and other women's 
groups staged Taiwan's first productions of The
    Vagina Monologues at the university and at Taipei's 
Red Playhouse.  As Ensler
    performed The Vagina Monologues in small towns and large cities all around the world, she
    saw and heard first-hand abound shocking incidents that women had suffered,
including
    stories of rape, incest, domestic battery and genital mutilation.  At the end of
    Ensler's New York performance on Feb. 14, 1998, she 
and a group of New York women declared
    Valentine's Day to also be V-Day, which stands for "Vagina, Violence committed
    against women by men, and Victory."  The group declared that the day should be
    commemorated until violence against women stops. |