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ZIMBABWE: Women call for greater political role
IRIN
News
August 15, 2003
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=36011
HARARE - A few
weeks before municipal polls take place in most of Zimbabwe's major
cities and towns, women lobbyists are calling for political parties
to increase the number of female election candidates.
With women constituting
54 percent of the population, women's groups are agitating ahead
of the local government elections on 30 and 31 August for representation
in public office that better reflects the demographic ratio.
At the moment
there are only 46 women representatives out of 333 councillors in
urban councils, and far less in rural district councils.
Janah Ncube,
director of the Women in Parliament Support Unit, a lobby group
championing the cause for women's empowerment, says at just over
10 percent, women's representation in urban councils is extremely
low.
She blames Zimbabwe's
political system. "It is a system which seems to say women
can't play roles that have an impact. The system of democracy allows
everyone to contribute, but we often ask why women can't be given
equal opportunity to play their part in national development."
In a Southern
African Development Community (SADC) declaration in 1997, regional
leaders agreed to a 30 percent target for female representation
in their national political bodies by 2000. The Gender and Development
Declaration also called for the repeal of all discriminatory laws,
and the amendment of constitutions where necessary, to advance the
status of women.
Not much has
been done to amend the Zimbabwe constitution and legislate change
to meet the 30 percent target, three years past the deadline. The
slight improvement in recent years in women's participation in local
government politics and civil society, is overwhelmingly concentrated
in the lower ranks rather than senior decision-making levels.
"We are
not seeing that change being put in place, although at political
party level, [the ruling] ZANU-PF and [the opposition Movement for
Democratic Change] MDC have pledged their commitment to put in quotas
for women representatives," Ncube said.
Her organisation
has written to all political parties, reminding them of the need
to increase women participation at decision-making levels. The only
party that visited the organisation to discuss the issue was the
National Alliance for Good Governance (NAGG). "We were surprised,
however, when NAGG gave us an excuse, saying while it would want
to include women, no women in their party structures were forthcoming
and wanting to contest. The MDC responded rather perfunctorily by
saying that they will try, while ZANU-PF chose to remain quiet on
the matter," Ncube noted.
Dryden Kunaka
of the MDC election directorate said that with the current political
violence and intimidation aimed at MDC candidates, his party was
not encouraging women to stand. "Everyone knows the kind of
political atmosphere we are operating in. Unless there is a change
that allows candidates to campaign freely, without fear of harassment
and intimidation, we will continue to see less women being nominated
as candidates for local councils," he explained.
The MDC has
filed a High Court petition seeking to compel the Registrar General
to reconsider its candidates, barred from lodging nomination papers
by pro-ZANU-PF mobs in urban centres such as Kariba, Marondera and
Bindura.
Oppah Muchinguri,
the only female provincial governor out of a total of eight, who
is also a ZANU-PF Women's League executive member and non-constituency
MP, says she is satisfied with government efforts to redress disparities
in female representation in decision-making bodies.
"The number
of women candidates for the council polls is increasing. We even
have a female contestant for the mayoral post in Mutare," she
said.
President Robert
Mugabe recently endorsed university lecturer, Ellen Gwaradzimba,
as his party's mayoral candidate for Mutare, Zimbabwe's third largest
city, after protracted intra-party wrangles over the selection process
threatened to derail ZANU-PF's mayoral campaign.
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