House of Elders (Afghanistan)

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House of Elders

مشرانو جرگه
Type
Type
History
Founded1931[1]
Leadership
Speaker

since 29 January 2011
First Deputy Speaker
Mohammad Alam Izedyar
since 29 January 2011
Second Deputy Speaker

since 29 January 2011
Structure
Seats102 members
Mesherano Jirga.svg
Political groups
  •   Independents (102)
Authorityadvisory and limited veto power; no law-making power
Elections
Voting system
One-third by district councils,
One-third by provincial councils,
One third nominated by the president
Meeting place
Afghan parliament building 2015.jpg
Kabul
Website
mj.parliament.af

The House of Elders or Mesherano Jirga (Pashto: د افغانستان مشرانو جرګه‎), was the upper house of the bicameral National Assembly of Afghanistan, alongside the lower House of the People (Wolesi Jirga). While the body de jure still exists, de facto it was effectively dissolved on 15 August 2021 after the fall of Kabul and after almost all government officials fled the country.

The House of Elders primarily had an advisory role rather than a maker of law.[citation needed] However, it does have some veto power.[citation needed]

The House of Elders has 102 members. One-third (34) were elected by district councils (one per province) for three-year terms, one-third (34) by provincial councils (one per province) for four-year terms, and one-third (34) were nominated by the president for five-year terms. However, elections for the district councils were not held in the 2005 parliamentary elections. As such, each provincial council also selected one of its elected members to temporarily hold seats in the house until district council elections were held. Half of the presidential nominees had to be women, two representatives from the disabled and impaired and two from the Kuchis.[2]

Speakers[]

Speakers of the Mesherano Jirga since establishment in 1931

Name Entered office Left office Notes
1931 1933 [1]
1934 1936 [1]
1937 1939 [1]
1940 1942 [1]
1943 1945 [1]
1946 1948 [1]
1949 1951 [1]
1952 1954 [1]
1955 1957 [1]
1958 1960 [1]
Abdul Hadi Dawi 1961 1964 [1]
Abdul Hadi Dawi 1965 1968 [1]
Abdul Hadi Dawi 1969 1972 [1]
Dissolved 1973 1988
31 May 1988 1992 [3][4]
Not functioning 1992 2005
Sibghatullah Mojaddedi December 2005 29 January 2011 [5]
29 January 2011 15 August 2021 [5]

Reserved seats for women[]

Having been absent from the decision-making process for centuries, Afghan women for the first time entered the political arena in 2001, after the overthrow of Taliban. With the introduction of reserved seats provision in the 2002 Emergency Loya Jirga, when ten percent of 1600 seats were reserved for women, the ground was laid for participation of Afghan women in parliament.

The new 2004 constitution secured reserved seats for women and minorities in both houses of parliament. In the 2005 parliamentarian elections, Afghan women won 89 seats. According to the Inter-Parliamentary Union, in 2009 they held 67 seats (27.7%) in the House of the People and 22 (21.6%) in the House of Elders. This representation is above the worldwide average of 18.5% and above the average of the United States at 16.8% for the House and 15.4% for the Senate.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "A glance of the History of Assemblies of Afghanistan" (PDF). Wolesi Yirga. 25 January 2019.
  2. ^ Article 84 of the Afghan Constitution.
  3. ^ "Central Asia". Area Study Centre (Central Asia), University of Peshawar. 19 February 1996 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ https://crossasia-journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/iaf/article/download/105/100
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b http://mj.parliament.af/

External links[]


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