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Fast tracking to women's equality in Africa
Janah
Ncube
Extracted
from Pambazuka News 290
February 07, 2007
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/39638
The AU Protocol
on women's rights has breathed new life into the feminist movement
in Africa and centralised the issue of women’s rights on the continent.
But Janah Ncube says African women cannot afford to be complacent
if implementation of the protocol is to be achieved in the near
future.
The protocol is
a vehicle/mechanism that is now creating the appropriate legal environment
to enable equity and equality to be realised for the African woman.
It is the evidence of our winning the fight for women’s rights in
Africa and it shows that it is only a matter of time before we completely
win the fight. The Niger set back was overt evidence and testimony
to the progressiveness of the protocol as an offensive assault against
patriarchy. The fact that they considered and debated the protocol
and realised that if they ratify it they would lose patriarchal
privileges and desecrate patriarchal structures is affirmation that
the women’s movement has developed as a tool, an instrument designed
to challenge and pull down the strongholds of patriarchy. What we
need to work on now is ensuring that the Protocol is implemented.
So we must mobilise our governments, institutions and peoples to
ensure that they are implementing it and making demands on the protocol.
Indeed we saw
the protocol breathing life back into the African Feminist movement
as many began to coalesce around its drafting, its adoption, its
ratification. It again triggered conversations on sensitive and
taboo issues which for this continent where difficult to converse
about. It revitalised the long forgotten issues of women’s basic
human rights which have been for a long time not realised and had
been left to the dustbin of history. Most importantly, it put women’s
human rights back into the centre of the continent’s agenda.
Cynics and critics
will argue that the protocol is only a legal instrument but is in
its-self not tangible rights. Indeed many countries have laws and
policies that grant women’s rights but have not appropriated those
rights. Do legal instruments deliver equity or equality? My response
to that is that they do set a basis and a standard and their existence
is an admittance that there has been a wrong which through the instrument
is being made right. And wherever there is rule of law and a just
legal system then any woman whose rights are denied and/or violated
can make claim and get those rights.
We have to be
realistic about the challenges that will face the implementation
of the protocol. Challenges of structure, adequate resources to
ensure delivery and most importantly political will to see this
protocol benefiting African women. We must not be satisfied by the
existence of the protocol, we must refuse to be comforted by its
ratification. Instead we must be stubborn, have tenacity, be bold,
be courageous and keep on with the agenda. The agenda was not the
protocol, the agenda is African women enjoying their human rights.
The protocol is one of the vehicles that can deliver that.
Until there is
not one girl child afraid of her father molesting her, until there
is not one woman afraid of her husband’s kicks we can not say we
have won the fight. Until our decision makers in all sectors, spheres,
levels are gender sensitive and have equal representation of women
and men then we can not rest. It may not be a fast process but we
can ensure that it is a sure process that will deliver African women
not just their rights but their dignity.
Three things we
must do; mobilise the African woman; let her be aware of the protocol
as an instrument to engage her communities about her rights and
let her make demands based on the protocol. We must target the rural
woman who is in the majority and also target the urban woman who
many times is ignorant of these civic issues. We must build a strong
feminist movement across the continent; it has delivered the protocol
and without it the protocol will lose its momentum and force.
The women’s movement
must confront and engage with the broader politics; time to talk
to women alone is over, its preaching to the choir, we must start
to ‘evangelise’ preach to those who do not know/understand the issues
we articulate about women’s human rights. This of course means confronting
one’s own personal beliefs, things at home, in our work places,
the institutions we engage with in our daily lives and indeed our
governments. These things are very political and so we must be political
actors. Our political legitimacy and clout increases when we engage
with politics in all issues that affect our lives and communities
and not only the ones that concern women’s issues.
*Janah Ncube
is Gender Thematic Manager at The Agency for Co-operation &
Research in Development. Ms Ncube is also a contributing author
to "Grace, Tenacity and Eloquence: The Struggle for Women’s
Rights in Africa" published by Fahamu – Networks for Social
Justice. Copies of the book can be purchased through the Fahamu.org
website.
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