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Calls for more women in politics
IRIN News
July 27, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=73470
Women
in Politics Support Unit (WIPSU), a Zimbabwean non-governmental
organisation, is leading a campaign for the achievement of gender
parity in choosing candidates for office, while a
new report by human rights advocacy organisation Amnesty International
shows women are increasingly becoming victims of political repression.
"The campaign [called
Fifty:Fifty] has already kicked off, and what we are currently doing
is to audit the constitutions and manifestos of all political parties,"
the director of WIPSU, Rutendo Hadebe, told IRIN.
"We want to see
if they have any policies on equality in decision-making; if they
have any clear policies on how they ensure that women politicians
also participate equally in terms of decision-making, including
within the political parties themselves."
Currently, 22.2 percent
of political offices are held by women in Zimbabwe, including five
female ministers in a cabinet of 53; 24 of the country's 150 parliamentarians
are women; two of its 10 provincial governors are women, and of
a total of 305 councillors in urban areas, 43 are female.
The African Union, in
line with international benchmarks, has called for a minimum of
30 percent female representation in public and private office, and
an ideal of 50 percent.
Zimbabwe's local government
elections for councillors and executive mayors are set for January
2008, while the joint presidential and parliamentary elections are
scheduled for March.
The ruling ZANU-PF party
is expected to field President Robert Mugabe as their presidential
candidate, who assumed power in 1980 after the country achieved
independence from Britain.
The main opposition party,
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), which has split into two factions,
is likely to field one of its faction leaders, Morgan Tsvangirai,
as a coalition candidate. Prof Arthur Mutambara is the leader of
the MDC's other faction.
WIPSU's short-term goal
is to ensure that 50 percent of candidates standing in next year's
elections are female, and the long-term aim is for gender parity
in the cabinet, public service, judiciary and diplomatic postings,
as well as in the media, the private sector and civil society.
"We are concerned
that, despite the fact that women make up 52 percent of the population,
they are not adequately represented in areas of decision-making,
such as parliament and local government. This means the views of
52 percent of the population are not being represented," Hadebe
said.
"We have observed
in the past that political parties, in the name of equal representation,
will field female candidates in unsafe seats, where they know they
will face certain defeat, while male candidates would be fielded
in safe constituencies, where victory would be guaranteed."
She said WIPSU
had been helping to develop the political careers of women, irrespective
of political affiliation, since 2001. "We work with all female
politicians from across the political divide, and group them on
issues like how to address meetings, dressing, understanding the
Electoral Act
and how to be effective leaders."
Elections have increasingly
been marred by political violence, but among women there has been
remarkable cooperation across the political divide.
"We hold workshops
and meetings where female politicians work so well together. The
female politicians also have what is known as Women's Caucus, which
groups all female members of parliament. It is chaired by a female
politician from ZANU-PF and deputised by an MP from the opposition
MDC," Rutendo said.
Oppression
of women
The Amnesty International
(AI) report, Zimbabwe: Between a Rock and a Hard Place, Women Human
Rights Defenders at Risk, released this week, said women made up
the "majority of the hundreds of Zimbabwean human rights defenders
who have been arbitrarily arrested and detained for engaging in
peaceful protest marches or meetings in the last two years."
The human rights of women
were being violated in numerous ways. "Some have been detained
with their children, or while pregnant, in deplorable conditions
falling far below international human rights standards," the
report said.
"Women ... have
been ill-treated while in custody after engaging in, or after attempting
to engage in, peaceful protest. They are often held in overcrowded
cells for periods ranging from a couple of hours to several days
before being taken to court or released," the AI researchers
said.
"Police often deny
human rights defenders access to lawyers and food. In addition,
human rights defenders who are injured as a result of police beatings
during arrest, and/or while in custody, are also denied access to
medical care."
Women were being insulted
and abused because of their gender. "Amnesty International
notes that most women human rights defenders who are arrested and
are taken into police custody are humiliated and subjected to sexist
verbal attacks. These include being called 'whores', and being told
that they are 'bad women' who deserve no sympathy from the police
authorities."
Among the leading female
MDC members who have been assualted are Lucia Matibenga, Grace Kwinjeh
and Sekai Holland. All three are currently convalescing from injuries
sustained during alleged police beatings earlier this year.
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