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Women
march against the NGO Bill
IRIN
News
September
22, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=43304
Bulawayo - About
50 members of the rights group, Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA),
have embarked on a 440 km march to the capital, Harare, to protest
a proposed bill that will regulate NGOs. The drum-beating, whistle-blowing
activists began the march on Sunday in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second
city. They are expected to reach the capital on 4 October and will
assemble outside parliament to present a petition against the controversial
bill. "What we are basically saying is that we are diametrically
opposed to the proposed bill, because, should it find its way through
parliament, it will mean suffering to many women and children. Of
course, there are many risks that include being arrested on the
way and being attacked by wild animals as we sleep in the open at
night, but we are absolutely undaunted," WOZA spokeswoman Jenny
Williams told IRIN from Gweru City, some 200 km north of Bulawayo.
The protesters, aged between 20 and 60, intend to "be a physical
and spiritual presence outside the parliament when it opens on 4
October and hope to convince the conscience of the legislators against
the bill," Williams said. "The NGO Bill, if passed in its current
form, will have struck at the lives and very survival of women and
their families. Most of the women are beneficiaries of donor food
and have HIV/AIDS orphans that they care for. This walk symbolises
a defending of the kindness of the donor community, and a way of
saying how much their help has meant to Zimbabweans," said WOZA
in an additional statement.
The proposed
bill, which replaces the Private Voluntary Organisations Act, requires
all NGOs to register with a government-appointed regulatory council,
similar to the controversial Media and Information Commission, and
disclose details of their programmes and funding. NGOs without registration
licenses will be shut down, and officials who continue their activities
illegally could face up to six months in prison. Organisations involved
in charity work, disbursing humanitarian assistance, the provision
of funds for legal aid, animal welfare, environmental issues and
the promotion of human rights are all covered in the bill. The proposed
legislation also seeks to ban foreign NGOs concerned principally
with "issues of governance", and deny registration to NGOs receiving
foreign funding for "promotion and protection of human rights and
political governance issues". The authorities have countered that
the draft bill is meant to regulate the operations of NGOs for national
security reasons.
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