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Mujuru's appointment not enough
National Constitutional Assembly (NCA)
December 06, 2004

http://www.nca.org.zw/NEWS/mujuru.htm

The NCA congratulates Mrs Joyce Mujuru nom-de-guere Teurai Ropa Nhongo for being the first woman in the history of Zimbabwe to be appointed to the state presidency.

While we commend the Zanu PF leadership for recognising the need for gender equality and challenges all the other political parties to do the same, it deplores the government’s failure to date to save Zimbabwe the shame of having a Constitution that does not, in this modern era, guarantee gender equality and protection from discrimination.

The elevation of a woman in Mujuru to the Presidency; albeit with a national gender policy; will not be of lasting benefit to the status of women as it will be at mercy of the shifting sands of political whims. Unless Zimbabwe anchors such progressive moves in the bedrock of the constitution, equality and true democracy will be unattainable to the masses of ordinary women – folk who comprise the majority of Zimbabwe’s population.

The NCA condemns the failure of the Zimbabwe Constitution to have Gender Commission and an equality clause. Section 23, the anti-discrimination clause of the Zimbabwe Constitution is hopelessly inadequate as it prohibits gender discrimination only by the state and the law, and not by private persons. It does not protect women from discrimination on the grounds of sex, marital status and pregnancy that women contend with on a daily basis.

The NCA condemns the licence in Section 23 to discriminate against women and others in the fields of:

  • the application of customary law
  • the use of public revenue
  • qualifications for public office
  • rights relating to communal land

The Constitution does not accord women the right to security of the person that would protect them from gender violence, and does not provide for affirmative action to address historical imbalances.

The Zimbabwe Constitution fails women in that it does not guarantee economic, social environmental and cultural rights and the rights of children. These rights such as those to health, nutrition, natural and education are issues central to women’s lives.

We remind the government and all political parties that the number of women in Parliament does not reflect gender equality. Only 13 female MPs in a 150 member Parliament speaks volume of gender insensitivity, which needs to be addressed as a matter of urgency.

The NCA challenges the government to demonstrate not only recognition of the need for gender equality; but commitment to it in the same supreme law of the land; the Constitution.

This is yet another reason why the NCA demands a new Constitution now. The NCA reminds Vice President Mujuru, that if she ultimately takes up the post of national vice president, she will carry with her the aspirations of Zimbabwean women for their total liberation in completion of the work she begun at Zimbabwe’s birth, in the Ministry of Community Development and Women’s Affairs.

Fungayi Jessie Majome
NCA National Spokeswoman

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