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41. Among ethno-nationalist populists, rhetoric about preserving the “pure,
authentic people” is often closely linked to sexual and reproductive rights. Feminism,
which at its core is about realizing women’s right to equality, is also portrayed as
antithetical to the nation. For example, a 2010 presidential candidate for the Freedom
Party of Austria supported by the far right publicly criticized feminism and efforts to
promote gender mainstreaming, and argued that the legal definition of marriage
presumed the intention to produce and raise children. 64 In the United States, abortion
and even contraception have been portrayed as a threat to traditional, white patriarchal
conceptions of the family. Female candidates affiliated with the Tea Party movement,
among them Michele Bachmann and Sarah Palin, went so far as to argue that abortion
should be outlawed, even in cases of rape. 65 Also in the United States, the nationalist
populist President has promoted misogyny by repeatedly making statements publicly
demeaning women. Beyond attacks against purely women’s rights, in some countries,
nationalist populists have advocated constitutional amendments aimed at an
exclusively heterosexual definition of marriage in order to prevent same -sex couples
from marrying. 66
42. Minority women have been especially vulnerable to right-wing ethnonationalist populism. For example, in much of the political debate across Western
Europe, the veiled Muslim woman is deployed as the symbol of the “other” who does
not belong. 67 The imagery of the veiled Muslim woman is also used to argue that
misogyny is inherent in Islam. Countries that prohibit persons from wearing an Islamic
veil in public effectively exclude many Muslim women from public spaces, and courts
in some places have been swift to respond to this issue. For example, in the summer o f
2016, about 30 municipalities, located mainly in southern France, issued decrees
prohibiting the wearing of the Islamic swimsuit on the basis that it constituted a
religious sign, in breach of the principle of secularism, and did not conform to hygiene
and safety rules for those bathing in the sea. 68 The highest administrative court of
France ordered the suspension of the execution of those municipal decrees, on the
basis that they constituted an unjustified, serious breach of the fundamental rights to
freedom of movement, personal freedom and freedom of conscience.
43. In other parts of the world, nationalist populist mobilizations have limited the
access of minority women to sexual and reproductive health through administrative
and financial barriers. Some countries have more explicitly discriminatory policies in
place. For many years, the Government of Myanmar subjected Rohingya women to a
strict two-child policy, and those found “to have violated restrictions on childbirth
were prosecuted under Criminal Law section 188, which could result in imprisonment
for up to 10 years, fines or both”. 69 Fear of repercussions from authorities for
unauthorized childbirth and the lack of access to safe, modern birth control options
to prevent unwanted pregnancies had often led pregnant Rohingya women to either
flee the country or resort to illegal and unsafe abortions. 70
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64
65
66
67
68
69
70
18-12945
Wodak, The Politics of Fear, pp. 13–14.
Ibid, pp. 16–17.
Human Rights House Zagreb submission.
See Wodak, The Politics of Fear.
OHCHR, “Press briefing notes on France and Bolivia”, 30 August 2016.
Human Rights Watch, “Submission to the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
against Women regarding Myanmar’s exceptional report on the situation of women and girls
from northern Rakhine State”, May 2018, p. 7.
Ibid., p. 8.
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