|
Back to Index
Women-s
Day: Honouring Sekai Holland, Grace Kwinjeh and other women detainees
Isabella Matambanadzo
March 15, 2007
View Save Zimbabwe
Campaign index
of images and articles
As the commemorations
for International Women's Day draw nearer, I am inspired to write
to you all about the legacy Sekai Holland and Grace Kwinjeh have
made to our movement. I realise that in their immediate roles they
are largely seen as representatives of opposition politics, but
that is not where they have always been located, and it is certainly
not what I wish to focus on through this email.
I visited both
of them on Tuesday when they were admitted in the late afternoon
to Avenues clinic. My intention was to offer any kind of help, be
it with making calls to family and friends, just chatting or just,
in the spirit of sisterhood that the women's rights movement of
Zimbabwe has taught me, just being there.
Sekai Holland
is over 60. She fought the battle at the high court for the rights
of non-Zimbabwean men who married Zimbabwean women to have citizenship.
at the time the law was discriminatory in favour of zimbabwean men
whose non zimbabwean spouses received citizenship quite automatically.
Her battle against the Citizenship
Act was an important win for women's rights to equal treatment
before the law and opened up the way for many more women's equality
cases to come before our domestic courts.
An IPS
document gives further details.
To quote this
document:
"Sekai, a black
Zimbabwean woman married to white Australian Jim Holland, is one
person who suffered a bitter struggle at independence when, she
says the government wanted to deport her hus- band back to his home
country despite the constitutional provisions against such an act.
"For 16 months
we fought battles in the courts to have my husband allowed to stay
in Zimbabwe and at last we won the battle and my husband was allowed
to stay in the country," she explained.
"Mixed marriages
under the colonial period were rejected and the government did not
do much to reconcile citizens not to segregate each other on racial
lines, says Holland. Sekai feels that both the government and non-governmental
organizations have failed to invest in racial harmony. As a result,
some colonial practices that perpetuate racial discrimination still
exist in Zimbabwe," she says.
"This piece of
legislation (Citizenship Act) was both unlawful and unconstitutional
because it violated women's rights. It did not have any space in
a democratic society which respects human rights and gives equal
opportunities to all people irrespective of their sex," Madhuku
says. (Lovemore Madhuku, chairperson of the NCA,
has had a record of being an ally of the women's movement on matters
to do with law and rights).
The discriminatory
nature of the Citizenship Act forced women and human rights campaigners
to wage a bitter campaign against it. Their efforts forced President
Robert Mugabe's government to persuade Parliament to amend the Constitution.
The amendment became famously known as Amendment number 14 of 1996.
The new law took away men's rights to have their foreign wives gain
automatic citizenship. It now requires both Zimbabwean men and women
who have foreign spouses to apply to the Immigration Office for
registration of their unions.
Zimbabwe is considered
as having one of the best Bill of Rights when it comes to race relations
and mixed marriages in particular. The Declaration of Rights Section
11 of the Constitutions says, '... every person in Zimbabwe is entitled
to the fundamental rights and freedoms of the individual, that is
to say, the right whatever his race, tribe, place of origin, political
opinion, colour, creed or sex but subject to the respect for the
rights and freedoms of others and for the public interest'. "
Sekai was influential
in supporting demands for the creation as early as 1981 of the Ministry
for Community Development and Women's Affairs. It was envisaged
as a national mechanism for women's advancement. The Ministry provided
an invaluable platform for debate on women in development issues.
It was also a critical force in the reaalistion that the women's
movement, operating from outside of the ministry and government
space, could advocate for the more political demands for omen's
emancipation.
Last night ztv
aired an advert for the Ministry and Unifem inviting Zimbabweans
to commemorate international women's day on march 17. The "end impunity
for violence against women" slogan --with its the take off point
was the domestic violence bill could not have been more poignant.
Grace and Sekai
were brutalised while in police custody, but looking at their bodies
in hospital made me realise just how much the state machinery, in
this instance the police, has mirrored the battering husband...So
my heart sank as I was invited to a ceremony that because of this
violations, I must question...How do I go and spend money on buying
the official regalia and being collected from the usual pick up
points...while sekai, grace and other comrades of our movement have
been battered. And the formal systems of women's protection, the
women's movement, has kept so alarmingly quiet. The report of the
Doctors say: the injuries documented were consistent with beatings
with blunt objects heavy enough to cause the following:
- Fractures to
hands, arms and legs in 5 individuals including Lovemore Madhuku
with a fractured ulna. 3 of these, Elton Mangoma, Sekai Holland
and Morgan Tsvangirai sustained multiple fractures.
- Severe, extensive
and multiple soft tissue injuries to the backs, shoulders, arms,
buttocks and thighs of 14 individuals.
- Head injuries
to 3 individuals, Nelson Chamisa, Morgan Tsvangirai and Lovemore
Madhuku with the latter two sustaining deep lacerations to the
scalp.
- A possibly
ruptured bowel in 1 individual due to severe blunt trauma to the
abdomen.
- A split right
ear lobe sustained by Grace Kwinjeh.
Prolonged detention
without accessing medical treatment resulted in severe haemorrhage
in Morgan Tsvangirai leading to severe anaemia which warranted a
blood transfusion. Injuries sustained by Sekai Holland were also
worsened by denial of timely access to medical treatment which led
to an infection of deep soft tissue in her left leg. Denial of access
to treatment in another individual suffering from hypertension lead
to angina.
Whatever our personal
views and emotions, especially about her present political location,
there is no denying Sekai's contribution to feminism in Zimbabwe
and its development.
An appropriate
response this year with the themes of women's day would be for political
peace and the machines of violence, be they public or private, to
stop brutalising women. The WOZA
women have repeatedly given testimony of their dire treatment in
jail cells, as have the women in the union formations.
Let's get beyond
the rhetoric of celebrating an international day with pomp and costume,
and really demand our rights to peaceful societies, as so boldly
outlined in the Beijing Platform for Action.
If our movement
is really not partisan and does not make choice based on political
location, but rather on the true principles of feminism, can we
show it. This violent machine that beat up Grace, Sekai and other
sisters, called them "whores, prostitutes of the opposition, Bush
and Blair". What does our individual and collective silence mean
in the face of such an assault on womanhood by patriarchal forces?
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|