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This article participates on the following special index pages:
16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence, 2007 - Index of articles
African
women and domestic violence
Takyiwaa Manuh
November 26, 2007
Visit
the index of articles on 16 Days of Activism
http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/5050/ghana_domestic_violence
The annual mobilisation
of women around the world around the theme of "16 Days of Activism
against Gender Violence" from 25 November - 10 December 2007
represents a tremendous global effort to increase awareness of violence
against women in all its forms. In light of the 2007 theme - demanding
implementation, challenging obstacles - this article looks at the
issue of domestic violence from the perspective of African experience,
and examines the impact of attempts to address it by legal means.
It poses three questions:
- what are
the similarities and differences in the experiences of African
countries that have attempted to pass domestic-violence legislation?
- what lessons
have been learned in the process?
- how do attempts
to pass such laws connect to the lived realities of ordinary women?
A new
agenda
The past two
decades have witnessed heightened activity by women's organisations
and movements in several African countries to promote women's rights
by redressing a range of discriminatory practices against women
and unequal gender relations in public and domestic life, which
work to prevent women from exercising their full rights as citizens.
The link between the public and domestic arenas is important here,
for (as Amina Salihu and her colleagues noted in a 2002 memorandum
on women's citizenship rights in Nigeria), women's experience of
citizenship is multilayered and interconnected: what happens at
the level of the domestic arena is in turn carried over to what
is generally called the public space.
The phenomenon
of violence is only one aspect of the discriminatory practices and
unequal relations women in Africa face, but it is a significant
and widespread one. This is most shockingly on display in conditions
of war, where (as in the current conflict in North Kivu province
of the Democratic Republic of Congo, for example) women have been
subjected to systematic assault and abuse. It is also apparent in
more "normal" circumstances, such as the campaign for
the presidential elections in Kenya in December 2007, where several
women candidates have been targeted in an effort to prevent their
campaigns from penetratating the largely male spaces of decision-making
and national life.
The African
Platform for Action (Dakar declaration) of 1994 was a landmark document
in highlighting the problem of violence against women on the continent.
Before and since, however, such violence has often gone unreported,
and until recently there were across Africa few supporting pieces
of legislation or official practice that could be used to challenge
it. True, several states had signed and/or ratified international
conventions and treaties such as the Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (Cedaw) of 1979 or
the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights, but these had
not been incorporated into domestic law.
The protocol
to the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights on the Rights
of Women in Africa was ratified by the required fifteen member-states,
and came into force on 26 November 2005. It places an obligation
on state-parties to take measures to address not only violence against
women but also other aspects of women's rights: in public or private
life, in peacetime and during periods of war or conflict. It also
explicitly includes marital rape and other forms of forced or unwanted
sex.
Women activists
have been emboldened by these developments to push states as far
apart as Mauritania and Rwanda to enact legislation addressing gender-based
violence; Sierra Leone is the latest country to have successfully
enacted legislation (although the practice of female genital mutilation
has not yet been outlawed). Uganda, Kenya, Nigeria and Ghana have
also attempted to pass domestic-violence laws; here, however, the
experience has been disparate.
Four
countries, four experiences
In Nigeria,
a draft domestic-violence bill prepared by the Legislative Advocacy
Coalition on Violence against Women has been lodged in the house
of representatives (the lower house of parliament) since 2003, but
has not even been listed in the order paper for hearing. The provision
on marital rape, which some view as "western" and "against
the culture of Nigeria" has been invoked to explain the slow
progress of the bill; settling it would, it is claimed, allow the
bill to be passed into law. The contradiction here is that Nigeria
has already ratified the protocol to the African Charter on Human
and Peoples' Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa, which prohibits
marital rape without any reservations.
The Kenyan experience
highlights a different face of misogyny. A sexual-offences bill
that seeks harsher penalties for perpetrators of sexual violence
became mired in controversy when a legislator (male, as were 204
of the 222 expected to vote on the bill) alleged that some provisions
would criminalise men's advances towards women. Civil-society groups
demanded that their votes should be transparent; when gun-toting
policemen blocked activists from entering parliament to press this
demand, they chanted anti-rape songs and chanted at the police:
"Kill us today so that we do not get raped tomorrow!"
The Ugandan
situation represents a further interesting contrast. In December
2003, a domestic-relations bill was tabled before parliament, containing
a host of provisions to deal with discriminatory laws and practices
in marriage, divorce, inheritance, property ownership, and violence
and equality within marriage and the family. Sylvia Tamale charts
what happened next: the bill reached the committee stage in early
2005, only to generate massive controversy that stretched beyond
parliament to the media and the streets (see "The Right to
Culture and the Culture of Rights: A Critical Perspective on Sexual
Rights in Africa", Feminist Legal Studies [forthcoming]). A
scathing attack on the bill's contents by the legal and parliamentary
affairs committee was echoed in a demonstration on 29 March 2005
by hundreds of women (the majority of them wearing the hijab) in
the streets of Kampala. They described the bill as a "coup
against family decency", and swore to oppose its passage. A
few weeks later, parliament shelved the bill for "more extensive
consultations." When President Yoweri Museveni declared during
the election campaign in February 2006 that "it (the domestic-relations
bill) was not urgently needed", the debate was effectively
closed. It was a severe setback for Uganda's women's movement.
A more positive
legislative outcome was witnessed in Ghana. Here, a domestic-violence
bill was subject to more than three years of extensive national
consultations led by the government ministry of women's and children's
affairs; the Domestic Violence Coalition, formed to support the
passage of the bill, also played a key role in the process. There
was early resistance from a surprising source, the then minister
of women's affairs (who argued that the law would "destroy
families"); and the coalition's demand for the repeal of S42(g)
of the criminal code (the so-called "marital-rape exemption"
also caused bitter acrimony. Those opposed to the bill portrayed
it and its gender-activist supporters as purveying "foreign"
ideas that threatened Ghanaian cultural beliefs and practices -
in particular, the sanctity of marriage and men's rights within
it.
This reaction
highlighted the lack of understanding of gender-based violence as
an equality issue that surrounded the debate over the proposed legislation
in Ghana. Even within the state and among the general public, fixed
and regressive attitudes remained prevalent - that women in social
life and within marriage had an inferior status, and that women
were to blame for provoking acts of violence by the way they dressed
or for being unfaithful.
In the event,
the Domestic Violence Act was passed on 21 February 2007, without
the express repeal of S42(g), although with the provision that "(the)
use of violence in the domestic setting is not justified on the
basis of consent." However, within a few weeks of the passage
of the law, the statute law commissioner, acting on his own initiative,
removed the offending S42(g) from the statute-book.
This new legislation
has been hailed as a triumph, but much work remains to be done to
ensure that it is fully implemented. This will require - so activists
and human-rights advocates in Ghana argue - a comprehensive, nationwide
domestic action plan and the provision of necessary human and budgetary
resources (partly in light of the fact governments have in practice
relied on donors to fund gender work in Ghana). Some aspects of
the social environment - in which most Ghanaian women still live
in poverty, depend on men, and are surrounded by attitudes and codes
that tolerate oppressive behaviour or allow serious violations of
women's rights to be "settled" without justice or accountability
- reinforce the argument that implementation mechanisms are vital.
The
next stage
Violence, including
domestic violence, deprives women of their ability to achieve their
full potential by threatening their safety, freedom and autonomy.
This variety of African experiences shows that the formulation of
laws is an important instrument in countering this threat; but it
is not enough to eliminate gender-based violence or (as in the Ugandan
case) to ensure its general acceptability, even among women. Rather,
multiple strategies and approaches are needed that recognise the
differing interests, lived realities and contradictions among women
of different class, religious and cultural backgrounds; and to find
ways to express proposed changes in language and practices that
better approximate women's lived realities and experiences.
* Takyiwaa Manuh
has been the Director of the Institute of African Studies, University
of Ghana, Legon since 2002 and is an Associate Professor at the
University of Ghana.
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