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AFRICA:
AU summit pledges to promote women's rights
IRIN News
July 07, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=42059
ADDIS ABABA - African
leaders on Wednesday pledged to place women at the heart of their development
agenda, and to intensify the fight against disease.
In an 11-point action plan agreed at the African Union summit in the Ethiopian
capital, Addis Ababa, they set out a strategy for improving the women's
rights on the continent.
The newly elected AU chairman, Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, told
leaders that many African countries still held negative attitudes towards
women. The leaders agreed that women must play a greater role in conflict
resolution and in the steps taken to ensure that they obtained equal access
to education.
A campaign to be launched in the coming year to highlight the abuse women
suffer during conflict will also focus on child brides and "sex slaves".
Also to be launched will be an African Trust Fund for Women to promote
skills training for women, with a special focus on improving their lives
in rural areas.
They leaders also pledged to ensure that new laws to protect women in
Africa would come into force by the end of the year.
Women's pressure groups have accused leaders of turning a blind eye to
their plight by failing to ratify the Protocol on the Rights of Women
in Africa. To date, only one of the AU's 53-member countries - the Comoros
- had ratified it. The protocol would only become binding when 14 more
governments have followed suit.
Women’s groups say that in sub-Saharan Africa women ran 60 percent of
informal businesses, and although they supplied 70 percent of farm labour
and produce about 90 percent of the food, they received less than 10 percent
of total farm income.
African leaders have now pledged to implement legislation to strengthen
women’s rights to land, property and inheritance.
The leaders also said they would intensify the fight against disease and
implement new laws designed to combat stigma.
The AU had warned that Africa was losing the fight against HIV/AIDS, malaria
and tuberculosis, which claimed millions of lives each year. A report
presented at the summit, revealed that barely half of African countries
had adopted legislation to prevent discrimination against people living
with HIV/AIDS. In its 22-page report, the AU also revealed that only a
handful of countries had complied with international guidelines to defeat
the spread of tuberculosis.
Some 48 heads of state were attending the summit, which focused on conflict,
development, and for the first time ever, debated gender issues.
The chairman of the AU commission, Alpha Oumar Konare, spelt out his vision
for Africa's future, placing before the leaders a US $1.7-billion blueprint
for change. Dubbed the African road map, it aims to promote expanded continental
integration and expresses support for key institutions such as the pan-African
parliament and court of justice.
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