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Statement
from the Gender & Media Summit
Media Institute of
Southern Africa (MISA)
September 22, 2004
Southern African gender and media activists
have challenged their leaders to explain how they intend to make
good on the commitment to achieving 30 percent women in decision-making
by the end of 2005.
In a statement issued at the close of the Southern African Gender
and Media summit in Johannesburg, the newly formed Gender and Media
Southern Africa (GEMSA) network also called on their leaders to
come up with a legally binding framework for ensuring gender balance
in all areas of decision- making.
The call comes against the background of indications that several
countries in the region have either not achieved this target or
might even regress in forthcoming elections.
GEMSA expressed particular concern that in Botswana, which houses
the Southern African Development Community (SADC) secretariat, even
if every woman candidate were to win her seat in the October election,
women would only constitute 21 percent of members of parliament.
As this is unlikely, the chances are that the representation of
women in politics in Botswana might drop from its current level
of 17 percent.
The 184 delegates from twelve Southern African countries also expressed
concern at the state of affairs in Mauritius, which hosted the Heads
of State summit in August, and has the lowest level of representation
of women in SADC (at 5.7 percent). Mauritius will be having elections
next year, and has so far not indicated how it intends to achieve
the thirty percent target.
Heads of state were urged during the August summit to adopt the
African Union (AU) position of fifty percent women in all areas
of decision-making but failed to formally do so. However, on his
return to South Africa, President Thabo Mbeki pledged to ensure
that South Africa achieves gender balance in the next elections
in 2008. Following the 2004 elections South Africa has 32 percent
women in parliament and 42 percent in cabinet. The ruling African
National Congress is revising its quota for women in politics from
30 to 50 percent.
Delegates urged all leaders in the region to come up with concrete
plans such as this and condemned the practice of signing declarations
with no intention of honouring them. "Gender equality is non-negotiable,"
said the newly elected GEMSA Chair, Colleen Lowe Morna. "We
therefore urged heads of state to adopt legally binding instruments
for going beyond the rhetoric of gender equality to making it happen
in reality."
Delegates noted with concern that only one Southern African country
(Namibia) has ratified the Protocol on the Rights of Women in Africa.
"The failure by leaders to formally adopt the protocol, after
it took eight years to get it tabled, is unacceptable," Lowe-Morna
said. "The protocol is entirely consistent with everything
that SADC countries purportedly stand for."
The meeting also condemned the draft NGO Bill in Zimbabwe that threatens
the freedom and existence of NGOs, including gender and media organizations
that are members of GEMSA.
The network, consisting of representatives of media practitioners,
media training institutions, editors forums, media women’s associations,
the Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA) and its country chapters,
Gender Links, gender and media networks around the region, adopted
a comprehensive plan of action for ensuring that women and men are
given equal representation and voice in the media.
The summit is a follow up to the Gender and Media Baseline Study
(GMBS) that showed women represent 17 percent of news sources in
the Southern Africa media and are portrayed in stereotypical and
derogatory roles, most often as sex objects or victims of violence.
GEMSA plans include carrying out research and conducting advocacy
on how consumers of news respond to the way in which women and men
are portrayed; challenging glass ceilings for women in the media;
participating in the Global Media Monitoring Project in February
2005; repeating the GMBS in 2007 to see if there has been progress
and holding governments accountable for their commitments to gender
equality. GEMSA, through partner organizations, will also prioritise
gender training and sensitisation of the media.
For more information contact Jennifer Mufune at 264 (61) 232975
Visit the MISA
-Zimbabwe fact
sheet
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