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This article participates on the following special index pages:
16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence, 2007 - Index of articles
Feminist
reflections on gender violence, political power and women's emancipation
Grace Kwinjeh
Extracted from Pambazuka News 331
December 07, 2007
Visit
the index of articles on 16 Days of Activism
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/44842
"Freedom,
my friends, does not come from the clouds, like a meteor; it does
not bloom in one night; it does not come without great efforts and
great sacrifices; all who love liberty, have to labour for it."
Feminist Ernestine Rose, 1860.
Former Rhodesian
Prime Minister, Ian Smith has just died, but his patriarchal legacy,
of dictatorship, violence and sexist oppression lives on.
The use of violence
in contemporary Zimbabwean politics, is part of the machismo political
culture inherited from settler colonialists, which successive political
systems are failing to dismantle.
I therefore,
wish here to link, gender based violence within the Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC), to the question of political power and
women-s emancipation, based on our experience as a women-s
political leadership. My position being that patriarchy as a system
of oppression is not going to willingly dismantle itself, it has
to be fought.
Historically,
Zimbabwe-s violence politics, has been grounded in the quest
for political power and positioning, with women often being at the
receiving end of it. Thus today, MDC women are still subjected to
all forms, of violence, by both the party and the State, as both
systems grapple for political power.
Just as during
the liberation struggle when women combatants, were told national
liberation first, their emancipation later, today, women who have
gone into front-line politics are being sold this 'two stage-
approach model. This approach implies that the struggle is gender
neutral, and that we suffer the impact of State repression the same
way, and that when freedom is attained we(men and women) will have
the same political will, to reverse gender disparities or to dismantle
patriarchy.
Events on the
ground in the MDC, however, speak differently.
Days before
the annual, International 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence
Campaign celebrations, MDC women, were once again subjected to another
public humiliating bout of violence, this time, by their male counterparts.
Women protestors,
against the unfair sacking and treatment of the Women-s Assembly
chair-person, Lucia Matibenga, were beaten up in front of the party-s
head-quarters Harvest House, on Sunday the 18th of November. The
known assailants used fists, kicked, threw stones, to subdue and
stop the female demonstrators, from proceeding with the protest
in which they were demanding audience with their MDC leader, Morgan
Tsvangirai, over the unresolved women-s chair matter.
Strangely, though
it seems that it was beyond Tsvangira-s political comprehension
that the women were practising their democratic right to demonstrate
and seek audience with him, as their leader, instead he shunned
them. The message they got was violence. This is not accidental,
but a political message.
The irony that
played itself out in this scene, is that the MDC male leadership
is forcing a new chair-person for women on the women, as part of
their "empowerment" or "building efficiency"
within the Women-s Assembly, yet the beneficiaries of this
male largess are denied the right to freely express themselves,
as part and parcel of that political commitment to their liberation
cause.
Apart from the
violence and total exclusion, we have witnessed in this matter,
the men will also not allow a democratic mechanism by which a proper
process is carried out, of finding out who the most popular women-s
leader is, and conferring the women-s chair on that person.
Again, not accidental, thus the basis of my thesis, on political
and gender relations within the MDC being rooted in patriarchal
tendencies and practices.
The violence
both physical and psychological meted out, against Matibenga herself
and her supporters, is characteristic of the misogynistic nature
of Zimbabwean society, inherited from Smith, which Mugabe has used
against opponents real or false, replicated by men in the opposition.
Sexist oppression has thus been validated as normal political practice
in opposition politics.
And so it seems,
each time male power in the MDC seems to be under threat, violence
erupts in all its forms - physical and psychological, we have seen
this in the party, prior to the October 12 split, when senior female
leaders were targets of this violence.
The assault
on MDC MP Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga, twice at party events,
in one attack she was with feminist Janah Ncube. The psychological
or emotional abuse, of Sekai Holland when the men, callously removed
her as secretary for International Affairs. Like Matibenga she was
told, it was because she had been "inefficient" as secretary.
I will not try to delve into an analysis of efficiency and male
leadership, otherwise Zimbabwe would have been a better society.
Or the emotional
trauma and stress I suffered when without warning funding was cut
to me as MDC Representative to Europe. In fact I was slowly marginalised
and excluded from all party activities, until I made my own way
home. I was an emotional wreck, as I failed to survive, to date
this gross treatment has never been explained to me, by either of
the male leadership in the two MDC factions.
Last year, MDC
MP Trudy Stevenson, suffered, severe physical attacks in an MDC
constituency, which left her bruised with a broken arm and deeply
traumatised. These are examples of women who have come out, I respect
those who remain silent, there are more cases, of physical and emotional
abuse. Including instances of sexual harassment of female staff
members that have been suppressed.
All the abuse
we have suffered has been condemned internationally, as being retrogressive
to the women-s emancipation agenda.
The Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women,
(CEDAW) or the International Women-s Bill of Rights, defines
discrimination as "...any distinction, exclusion or restriction
made on the basis of sex which has the effect or purpose of impairing
or nullifying the recognition, enjoyment or exercise by women, irrespective
of their marital status, on a basis of equality of men and women,
of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, economic,
social, cultural, civil or any other field."
Matibenga-s
abuse has also led me to revisit the notion of sacrifice within
the framework of gender power relations, in the party where others
are "sacrificers" or "sacrificed" and others
hold positions of power and privilege that insulate them from those
"sacrifices." It is an open secret that in her tenure
of office Matibenga never had a vehicle allocated to her, in spite
of all the dangers she was exposed to, such her brutal torture in
September, 2006.
For a long time
we have suffered silent persecution, like the horror stories of
the rape of female comrades during the liberation struggle, by their
fellow male comrades, that have never been really openly talked
about or the perpetrators brought to book. The negative reaction
to the screening of the "controversial" movie Flame,
which sought to highlight these crimes against women during the
liberation struggle was met with such a strong backlash by those
in the Zanu PF leadership.
We seem to be
ingrained with this, culture of silence around the forms of violence
or abuse, we suffer as women in politics. We have been socialised
into a political culture of only talking about State sponsored violence.
Matibenga-s
battle helps us to further interrogate and demystify these primitive
notions, of our silent persecution vis-à-vis our role and
placing as women in politics and the respect we deserve from our
male comrades.
Two weeks ago,
Matibenga was locked out of Harvest House by rowdy youths and told
to go away and form her own party. She was seeking an audience with
the party leadership which was about to hold a National Executive
meeting. There was no condemnation of this treatment of the widow
Matibenga, in fact in typical Zanu PF fashion, all rights are suspended
when one is seen to be at variance with the powers that be. Yet
another example of the terrible abuse, she is enduring.
A social liberation
party that articulates so well, violence against itself in the quest
for political power, but fails to understand the same kind of violence
against its own leaders and members, presents us with bigger questions
about the Zimbabwe we are fighting for, as women.
This is because,
the women-s emancipation project has been subordinated to
the political whims of those in power, who are not willing to let
go of patriarchal privilege, thus the different political systems
in Zimbabwe have failed in the endeavour of women-s liberation..
Each historical juncture, has seen women lose earlier gains, as
they are forced to renegotiate with patriarchy for their survival,
be it in the home or in politics. Male bigotry, in both the ruling
party and the opposition, has resulted in the further narrowing
down of spaces women had carved out for themselves as a movement.
When I first
wrote on Matibenga-s unjust sacking I was attacked by men
in both the ruling party and the opposition, and so my thesis is
based on my personal experience and of other women in politics,
and the backlash we suffer when we raise our heads. Most women in
politics, are subjects of political violence, both emotional and
physical, but are socialised not to talk about it. The way violence
in the domestic sphere has been treated as a "private affair"
and men getting away with increased cases of femicide, rape and
other forms of violence.
Looked at within
a historical context, what women at the front-line of Zimbabwe-s
struggle for social liberation and democracy are going through is
no different to what their sisters in Zimbabwe-s liberation
struggle were up and against. It is always a double struggle internal
and external.
Writes feminist
Patricia Chogugudza on women liberation fighters, "Zimbabwean
women, like their counterparts in Mozambique, Angola, and Guinea-Bissau,
joined the armed struggle. Their hope was that with the revolution,
gender equality would be certain. Women who could not conform to
tradition saw the revolution as an opportunity to escape difficult
situations. Yet feminist critics argue that at the end of the struggle,
women-s status actually fell as nationalist leaders and nationalist-oriented
societies, in the quest of preserving tradition, expected women
to be guardians of culture and respectability, or mistresses of
the emerging ruling elites, or wives and mothers, recruiters for
political parties, and labourers for the new market economy, while
men were engaged in competition for political power in the state
and the accumulation of wealth."
Thus today women
who have delved out of the socially constructed roles of wife, mother
or mistress into the public arena of politics have had to deal with
much back-lash.
Feminist critique
has shown us that power and democracy are historically exclusionary
notions, as they remain class based and androcentric. The MDC example
is important in this analysis, as the dust settles on the utopian
vision and idealism many of us viewed the party with, as a fulfiller,
of liberation goals, and ultimately our emancipation, that the nationalists
failed to deliver on. It is in this context that I will further
locate the analysis on the cycle of violence in Zimbabwean politics,
from the State, to the opposition, and how it impacts on women-s
participation, in politics.
In this vein
it is also important to take the analysis further to the rise and
consolidation of power by Tsvangirai-s "kitchen-cabinet",
and the brutal expression of sexist oppression, that has accompanied
it.
The rise of
this elite core group of male and female financiers is important
to the feminist discourse within the MDC because our political engagement
has changed totally, from the values upon which the party was founded
to a new finance driven, elitist political culture, that lacks popular
support and legitimacy.
It is now power
politics, in total and not a pro poor, people centred social liberation
struggle, that is just, recognises history and honours sacrifice
including women-s role in that struggle. Thus the suspension
of these values, explains the crude injustice against us as we are
further marginalised and excluded from political processes. Violence
in the party becomes self perpetuating as this group seeks legitimacy,
outside the organisations formal or official structures and boundaries.
Feminist Patricia
Macfadden, writes "And even when such systems aspired to be
inclusive and socially expansive, they remained essentially exclusionary
and patronizing of those who had been constructed as Other in relation
to power as the most critical resource in that society. Across our
world we struggled for what appeared to be collective visions of
freedom and justice, and while it is critical to acknowledge the
opportunities that nationalist liberation struggles and anti-colonial
resistance provided to those groups in our societies which had been
up till then excluded from the public, for example women, we must
also critically evaluate the implications of nationalism as an ideology
which is fundamentally sexist and exclusionary of women, particularly
during the neo-colonial period."
To further my
thesis on how power relations between Zimbabwean women and men have
not evolved with time, from nationalist notions and understanding
of our roles in society with the use of violence being a common
denominator between the systems, I will now look at Zanu PF-s
system of violence.
Mugabe responded
to the formation of the MDC and the threat to his continued hold
on power through violence. On the character of the post-colonial
state and the way it has responded to demands for reform, by the
broader pro-democracy movement, in Zimbabwe academic Brian Raftopoulos,
writes, "Confronted with a strong former liberation movement,
led by a leader with enormous prestige on the continent, civic and
opposition forces have had to face the combined obstacles of an
authoritarian nationalist state constructed through the legitimacy
of the liberation struggle, in a rapidly shrinking economy that
has comprehensively undermined the structural basis for the reproduction
of broad social forces in the country. Moreover, in the short term,
this scenario has not engendered a spirit of reform in the ruling
party. Instead observers have witnessed the intensification of repressive
rule and the continued marginalisation of opposition forces, with
the military taking on an increasingly prominent role in all spheres
of the state."
I celebrate
sheroes of the struggle, like young Talent Mabika who lost her life
to the regime, others have been raped, tortured, arrested and have
suffered different forms of victimisation in the hands of the ruling
Zanu PF party.
The Women
of Zimbabwe Arise, (WOZA), has just released a report
on the violence suffered by its members, in the hands of state
agents, reads part of the report, "WOZA has conducted over
100 protests on various issues of civil rights and social justice
in its five-year existence and up to 3,000 women have spent time
in police custody. Many have been detained more than once, most
for 48 hours or more and 112 members once spent five days in police
cells. These women, front-line human rights defenders, are willing
to suffer beatings and unbearable conditions in custody to exercise
their constitutional rights and fundamental freedoms. They continue
to suffer torture and other forms of cruel, humiliating and degrading
treatment."
Given the above
analysis and the way it now mirrors the unhealthy situation pertaining
in the opposition, of increased authoritarianism, lack of accountability
and violence, I will further link this situation to yet another
process and the danger it poses for Zimbabwe-s future political
dispensation, in relation to popular participation, democracy and
our emancipation as women.
As part of the
deal under South-Africa-s President Thabo Mbeki, SADC sponsored
mediation, the two MDC formations agreed to endorse Constitutional
Amendment number 18, against public opinion on the political recklessness
of such a move. I will not go into the details of the amendment
and how in many respects it contradicts the very struggle the pro-democracy
movement has been waging, over the past years, and how the manner
in which it was adopted short changes our quest for participatory
democracy.
However, it
is important to use this example to further illustrate, and magnify
my point on the connection between 'elite-deal- making
and politics of exclusion to increased violence and marginalisation
of women, in the MDC. Civil society organisations, and the women-s
movement got a rude awakening last September, at the voting for
CA 18, when the Secretary General of the Arthur Mutambara led faction,
Professor Welshman Ncube, literary told them that, their work was
to lobby and advocate, they must leave power to politicians.
Defending their
voting for CA 18, in Parliament Ncube said,"At that time I
was the spokesperson of the NCA and President Tsvangirai was the
chairperson. The NCA agreed that we needed a new constitution for
Zimbabwe which would be crafted or written in an open, transparent
and participatory manner. In that regard, we as members of the NCA
were there to oppose two things. One: the piecemeal amendments to
the Constitution of Zimbabwe, Two: the unilateral manner of setting
such piecemeal amendments. Mr. Speaker, it is important to understand
those two principles. Let me say that these two principles were
conceptualised, conceived and adopted, not to be verses in a bible.
They were strategic and tactical principles which were intended
to forge the making of a people-driven constitution. I despair today
when I read and hear the attempt to transform these principles into
some fundamentalist decrees which, we are told, are to be regarded
as completely sacrosanct. As far as we understood them, they were
supposed to be means to an end." And the end political.
Consequently,
again by going this route the MDC has agreed to play junior partner
to Zanu PF and so now they are on a reactive rather than proactive
agenda, on many electoral issues, such as constituency boundaries,
access to media, political violence and so on.
Zanu PF however
feels re-legitimated as it sees a mirror image of itself in an MDC,
that does not respect women, public opinion and is violent.
The men will
broker a power sharing deal that will not transform our society,
by reconstructing the gender, class and power relations, as they
exist, today, but rather endorses the status quo.
And so the notion
of liberation through this avenue, has to be viewed within a perspective,
of it really being a reconfiguration and consolidation of patriarchy,
in our politics, just as we witnessed at the Lancaster House Conference,
without any popular participation or support.
Meaning that
our experience as women, in politics should really be an eye opener
to the struggle ahead beyond Zanu PF-s demise. This abandoning
of values we have believed to be sacrosanct, by the men, should
be an eye opener to the longevity of our struggle for emancipation.
Activist and
journalist Charlene Smith writes, "Governments are by their
nature hypocrites. The structure of modern political systems encourages
this. Globally politicians are more concerned about getting the
right sound-byte on television than in going into communities to
hear what people have to say. Politics and perhaps even the way
you and I live our lives, have become divorced from values. Values
drive societies, they are the essence that sustains humanity. Without
them societies decay."
Given this sad
scenario, as a political activist who has put in her all in the
fight for a just and democratic society, I can only urge other sisters
in the struggle to find new spaces, to continue with our struggle
for emancipation, and for those who remain in the patriarchal systems,
I can only give them my support.
In conclusion
I say Smiths ghost will haunt Zimbabwean politics for some time
to come.
*Grace Kwinjeh
is a visiting scholar with the Centre for Civil Society and writes
in her personal capacity
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