Women candidates are pushing for greater representation in Mongolia's male-dominated politics, raising their voices for change and inspiring girls to follow in their footsteps. Mongolians go to the polls in parliamentary elections on Friday, with the ruling Mongolian People's Party widely expected to retain a majority it has held for eight years. But for the first time in almost a decade, parties are required by law to ensure that 30 percent of their candidates are women, in a country where politics is overwhelmingly dominated by men.
As a result, more women than ever before are running this year, in a new voting system that balances proportional lists with district candidates elected directly by the people. "The era we are living in demands the quota," Dorjzodov Enkhtuya, a 51-year-old former TV anchor running for the main opposition Democratic Party, told AFP in capital city Ulaanbaatar. "There are almost no women in decision-making positions," she said.
"We are changing the game." - Strict patriarchal norms - In Mongolia, gender inequalities are especially acute in the vast countryside, where nomadic life is governed by strict patriarchal norms. But even in rural areas, attitudes are slowly shifting.
In 2022, the government appointed Enkhbat Bolormaa as the country's first-ever woman governor in the western province of Khovd. The decision sparked national debate -- provincial governors in Mongolia are typically required to participate in traditional ceremonies usually rese.
