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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Media coverage of gender and the Constitution-making process
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
March 27, 2012
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Introduction
A constitutional
document embodies a society's highest aspirations. In the
words of the former and late Chief Justice of South Africa, Justice
Ismail Mohammed, a constitution is " . . . not simply a statute
which mechanically defines the structures of government and relations
between the government and the governed, it is a 'mirror of
the national soul', the identification of the ideals and aspirations
of a nation, the articulation of the values binding its people and
disciplining its government".
As such, a constitution presents a powerful emancipatory tool in
women's struggle to shatter the centuries-long "glass"
ceilings of patriarchal oppression. This study examines the role
played by the country's mainstream media as a key stakeholder
in giving significance and visibility to Zimbabwean women's
fight for gender equality in the on-going constitution-making
exercise.
Zimbabwean women
have certainly come a long way from their culturally imposed roles
as housewives and homemakers. Previous studies have highlighted
how women's oppression was entrenched by the colonial authority
and perpetuated by the new black political elite (dominated by men)
who, in the aftermath of the liberation war, called on women to
resume their "respectable' roles as mothers" in
spite of their joint effort to liberate the country.
However, in
large measure due to a vigilant women's movement for gender
equality, Zimbabwean women have progressively clawed their way into
the public sphere to lay claim on the national stake. Today, women
represent a significant percentage of the professional workforce
and are political office holders.
In a major highlight
for female political representation, the country boasts of a female
Vice-President, Joice Mujuru, and a female Deputy Prime Minister,
Thokozani Khuphe - the politics around the appointments notwithstanding.
But the battle is far from over. Zimbabwe's current Lancaster
House constitution
was primarily to transfer power from the colonial authority to the
black government. In a view echoed by other gender activists, Deputy
Minister of Women Affairs, Gender and Community Development, Jessie
Majome, has described the constitution as "one of the worst
in the world" in terms of women's rights and equality.
Gender activists argue that Section 23 of the supreme law perpetuates
the discrimination of women in issues to do with inheritance, death,
marriage, divorce, and other 'customary' issues. This
confirms observations by gender expert and policy strategist Janah
Ncube that women's fight for constitutional justice is based
on "the discriminative and exclusionary texts of the constitution"
and that Zimbabwean women's fight for a new constitution is
a fight for fundamental rights.
However, in
a major boost for the gender equality campaign, the coalition government
committed itself to ensuring "full citizenship (for women)
and gender equality" in the on-going constitutional reform
exercise that is informed by the desire for a "people-driven"
constitution. The rewriting exercise therefore provides an important
rallying point for women to consolidate gains and plug all legal
inadequacies that perpetuate their discrimination.
The media is
a key stakeholder in the process as gender and media activists posit
that the press cannot be truly free when almost 52% (women) of the
population is muted. The research therefore assesses the Zimbabwean
mainstream media's role in giving space and visibility to
women's concerns, voices and participation in the constitution-making
process to ensure the full realisation of their rights.
The three main
phases in the rewriting exercise, which began in 2009, are: the
public consultation phase, the drafting stage and the referendum
where the proposed constitution will be put to a vote. At the time
of compiling the research, the revisional exercise was at the writing
stage where the views of people from the outreach process are being
compiled into a draft.
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