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Swaziland:
Empowering women to beat abuse
IRIN News
July 03, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=73057
Most Swazi women who
face domestic violence do not take their children and walk out of
the house. "They say, 'who is going to feed me?'" Nonhlanhla
Dlamini, Director of the Swaziland Action Group Against Abuse (SWAGAA),
told IRIN. But this is changing.
An innovative SWAGAA
programme to empower women economically in Swaziland's patriarchal
society is helping many out of a cycle of abuse and dependency.
Until last year, women were regarded as minors in terms of the law,
unable to own property or open a bank account without the permission
of a male relative or husband.
Financial dependence
on their abuser has usually forced them to endure, but "with
this new initiative we are telling them, 'you can actually feed
yourself'. You don't have to rely on your husband for everything
if you are bringing income into the household," said Dlamini.
Swaziland is a mostly
rural nation. About 350 chiefs preside over communities where 80
percent of the population lives, mostly as subsistence farmers removed
from commercial activity.
The Swazi Women's Economic
Empowerment Project started early in 2006; today, there are 32 cooperatives
serving over 47,000 beneficiaries, mainly women and their dependents,
which can even include husbands in a country with an unemployment
rate of 40 percent.
Helping
themselves
Project ideas are thought
up by women, who form the groups. They make clothing, handicrafts
or soft furnishings; raise poultry, pigs or cattle, produce dairy
products, or grow and prepare herbal medicines.
The women usually already
have the knowledge and skills required for a particular cooperative
enterprise, but they need inspiration and instruction to exploit
their knowledge commercially.
"These are actually
very poor communities, and it is exciting to expect - based on what
has happened thus far - that five years from now they will have
lots of money and they can get into bigger investments," said
Dlamini.
She said the initial
purpose of the programme was two-fold: to free women from abusive
situations, and from grinding poverty.
"Our assessments
into the causes of domestic violence found that men are poor, and
are frustrated that they are not good providers. If the woman is
dependant on the man for everything, from salt to candles, the man
can tend to be abusive out of his frustration. When he is in total
control, there is bullying sometimes. If a woman brings something
into the house, the man loses that total control," Dlamini
said.
The programme works directly
with communities and does not involve government bureaucracies.
"We are targeting the grass roots, and there is no other way
than to go out to the rural areas, call meetings, and discuss things
with the women directly," said Harriet Dube, a programme officer.
"They do not get
newspapers out there [in the countryside]. First, we go to the chiefs,
the community leaders and elders, and tell them what it is all about,
and they call the meeting."
Funding for the programme
comes from German donors, but all financial inputs for enterprises,
no matter how modest, come from the women themselves.
"The women receive
no financial assistance to start their projects. They have to understand
that this is their money, and they will take good care of it. The
only thing we give them is the training," said Dlamini.
Dube is one of the instructors
who tell the women how to start a group with their neighbours and
female relatives, and how to turn an idea into an enterprise.
Helping
their families
"Everyone is equal
in the cooperative. There is no company director or even chairman
for the meetings. Everyone has to take responsibility for chairing
the meetings," she said.
"Each person keeps
a record of how much they contributed, and another member must countersign.
They are also instructed how to do audits of their companies."
The new businesswomen's
families have been the main beneficiaries so far. "It is having
a very positive impact on the children," said Dlamini.
"The women are telling
us, 'Now we are able to pay our children's school fees. I am able
to buy a pair of shoes with the money I actually earned. We are
able to get a decent meal, which is something we couldn't get before',
in fact, they are lamenting that this programme did not come a long
time ago."
There is also evidence
that domestic violence has waned in the households of project members,
and SWAGAA has not received reports of gender or child violence
perpetrated against cooperative members.
The programme foresees
an economic boom coming from the new empowerment. "In 20 years
this will be really big. The poor women of today will be businesswomen.
The cooperatives will grow, and there will be a real impact on the
national economy," said Dlamini, who travelled to India last
year to see how similar, well-established projects there were faring.
"The cooperatives
[in India] are earning millions. The banks are taking them seriously,
because they have actually become big depositors," she said.
"I can see this happening in Swaziland."
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