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ZIMBABWE: Women raise their voices
IRIN
News
August 13, 2003
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=35963
JOHANNESBURG
- As momentum gathers for renewed talks between Zimbabwe's rival
political parties, civil rights groups have highlighted the impact
of the ongoing political and economic crisis on the daily lives
of women in the country.
Crisis in Zimbabwe
(CZ), a consortium of NGOs, has called for the greater participation
of women in the proposed talks, arguing that any negotiated settlement
between the government and the main opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) would lack legitimacy if women were excluded from the
process.
"Today
women in Zimbabwe find themselves at the confluence of the political,
economic and HIV/AIDS crisis. It is imperative that any future dialogue
between the government and the MDC includes women as key players,"
CZ spokeswoman Everjoice Win told IRIN.
In a recent
paper, "Crisis in Zimbabwe: A Women's Perspective", the
advocacy group noted that the current economic crisis had left scores
of women without work, while the high cost of living had "very
specific gender dimensions".
"To illustrate
just how affected women are by the crisis, all one has to do is
consider that a packet of 8 sanitary pads now costs, on average,
Zim $5,000 (about US $6). Most domestic workers only earn Zim $5,000"
Win said.
The price of
a packet of 3 male condoms - more commonly used by women to prevent
pregnancy and HIV infection - costs Zim $2,000 (about US $2). "Women
are having to compromise their own health, just so that they can
feed their families," Win noted.
CZ also drew
attention to the effects of government legislation on the ability
of women's groups to organise themselves. For example, the introduction
of the Public Order and Security Act (POSA) had reversed many of
the gains women had made in the first years after independence.
"Women's
organisation that have outreach activities in communities are finding
it difficult to reach the women, thereby denying women space to
participate in their own development programmes," the NGO said.
There were also
concerns over increased sexual violence. The organisation said the
rape of women by ruling party militia was well documented.
"Poor black
women have borne the brunt of this violence; in the townships, on
commercial farms, and in the rural areas. Documentation by the NGO
Human Rights Forum shows that scores of women have been raped, gang
raped, beaten up, taken into forced concubinage by state trained
and sponsored 'Green Bombers', and young women in particular now
face the prospect of HIV/AIDS infection," the paper alleged.
Win said talks
between the MDC and ZANU-PF should focus on revisiting the constitution.
"It is imperative that a comprehensive constitutional review
takes place, and in that process women want to represent themselves.
We want to see a constitution that gurantees our right as Zimbabweans."
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