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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Women's
Watch Bulletin 9/2008:
What has 28 years of independence brought women
Veritas
April 24, 2008
As we commemorated Independence Day on Friday 18th, Women's
Watch thought it would be interesting to hear what women are mulling
over after 28 years of freedom. We spoke to women across the board
and here are their reflections on Independence and Women.
"What
comes to my mind is the economic independence most Zimbabwean women
have attained. Right now in this current socio-political climate
it is women who are carrying the sustainability of Zimbabwean households
on their shoulders. Most women - whether they are doing care work
overseas or cross border traders, accountants, doctors, lawyers
or even vegetable vendors - are ultimately out-earning husbands
or partners.
In addition
the education we have received in Zimbabwe enables us to compete
equally at all levels and I have noticed that, particularly in civic
society sector where I am active, we make decisions and our voices
are reverberating across the nation. We are strong and powerful
and we are being recognized for that. In fact many of the movements
are being headed by women.
One of the difficulties
is that some of us are unable to reconcile the power and independence
we hold with the way we were socialized but it is extremely encouraging
that this situation allows us to be positive influences on both
our girl children and boy children. My daughter is being brought
up knowing that anything is possible and achievable." - Abigail
Gamanya, Media activist, Coordinator of Media Alliance of Zimbabwe
**********
Twenty
eight years of Independence has given me the opportunity to get
connected with myself. I was privileged enough to get my first degree
in the late 80s and I used that qualification wisely. I now work
as a freelance consultant in the region and I am thankful that I've
managed to be who I am.
I'm sad
that I can't imagine what the future will be for my children.
At least I can afford great quality education for them but I worry
because there is no future for them in this country. All institutions
have collapsed - education, health, social fabric and just the infrastructure
of Zimbabwe as a whole. I know that there are lots of kids with
great qualifications who are loitering on the streets, cleaning
old peoples' homes and looking after the aged in the diaspora.
They are not enjoying the benefits of their great education like
I did. Now I wonder with this bleak future compounded by political
uncertainty - not knowing who our future president will be - what
plans, if any, one can make.
Faced with these
complexities I resort to my spirituality and pray that ONE DAY soon,
the sun will rise, we will arise and conquer the demons that have
infested this beautiful nation. - Varuseve, independent
regional consultant.
**********
What hurts
me the most is that, while there is all this posturing by the leadership
over the election results and men decide what they want or don't
want or what they will or will not accept, it is others who suffer.
For the majority of women life goes on - the need to put scarce
food on the table, the continuous attention and response required
by home-based care, and the general disregard for women's
concerns in this whole fiasco.- Virginia
Muwanigwa, Gender Activist
**********
I can't
say I've celebrated although I knew it was 28 years since
we gained Independence There are so many things I am expecting as
a woman and a mother of two daughters. I don't see a future
for my daughters in terms of their employment, their dreams, their
aspirations or them starting a life on their own. Buying anything
- a bed, a fridge, a car or even a house is out of their reach.
The state of
health care has deteriorated. A lot of health care personnel have
left the country. The cost of drugs is high and medical care is
expensive and so are the contributions towards medical insurance.
I am looking
at inflation and the impact inflation has on my savings. I have
no real savings and my pension has been eroded. What affects me
is that because of the crisis we are not able to save money to help
our parents. Our salaries do not stretch and many people have to
supplement the income from their regular jobs. They have to find
other ways of earning money and so they don't concentrate
100 percent on their jobs.
I am concerned
by the breakdown of families. Many women have to leave their families
to make a living in the diaspora. I have a daughter in Manchester
and another daughter elsewhere. Family relationships are affected
- mothers and their children, spouses and siblings. Distances can
make families lose their bonding. We are becoming strangers and
that is not natural for us.
What I am saying
really is that there is a bleak future for post-Independence children.
- Sheila Matindike, Director of YWCA, Woman Activist
**********
It has
been a period where many changes in laws that affect women were
enabled or amended. But all these gains have not been realised for
lack of implementation/political will by authorities. I view this
period with both joy and sadness. Joy because we have all the beautiful
instruments assented to by the Government but these laws have not
really improved the status of women in Zimbabwe.
The 2008 elections
have further marginalised women in Zimbabwe, i.e. there are fewer
women in Parliament to represent their concerns, and that means
no voice for women at that level. Independence should be a total
package that will benefit both men and women but the playing field
has never been level. This situation will get worse as 2008, unfortunately,
could just mark the beginning of further violence against women
due to instability in the rural areas where acts of intimidation,
rape are being recorded following the unannounced polls. To me 28
years of independence as a woman have rekindled the images of violation
of women during the war of liberation. We had healed the wounds,
but the wounds have re-opened.
Zimbabwe needs
sober women leadership that will restore and heal the pain the populace
is feeling. No nation is truly free until the voices of women are
heard and recognised. - Ropafadzo Maphimidze, Veteran journalist
***********
What can
I say about the struggle for women's rights?
After 28 years
of Independence I'm thinking that supporting a woman to get
into political office should be a given in Zimbabwe. But first I
have to ask if she belongs to a party that believes in burning other
women on their buttocks if they do not toe a certain party line.
At a personal
level it is my daughter's witnessing of police beating up
people who had become riotous in the sugar queue. Now she thinks
that police and soldiers are there to beat up people. I would want
her to know that the police are there to help should you get lost
or need any other type of help. But can I really tell her in all
honesty that the police in Zimbabwe do not beat up people, because
despite 28 years of Independence, they do. - Catherine
Makoni, Lawyer and gender activist
**********
I can
vividly recall the image of Independence that is buried somewhere
in my mind - Robert Mugabe "the guerilla" turned
leader, Prince Charles and legendary Bob Marley. It embraced such
diversity. I was still in school and quite politically naïve
but it moved me when I heard the word reconciliation being hailed.
Having been one of the first five non-white girls to attend my particular
school, I was moved by the Speech of Independence. I needed to know
that things were going to change and we would all be embraced regardless
of colour, religion, race, etc. under the flag of red, black, green,
yellow and white.
I face great
difficulty when I attempt to conjure up that same passion. I have
to force myself to remember that there are many changes to celebrate.
We have gained entry into places that were once forbidden -
particularly as women in our own right. We are in positions of power
and prestige. We are a voice to be reckoned with. We have contributed
to changes in legislation, health, education, business and even
governance.
But then I am
disheartened that we still have to deal with the same power dynamics
as before in certain spaces. In fact it appals me. Women are being
assaulted, raped and tortured. How tragic!!! I really did not want
my daughters to grow up witnessing more of the same. I thought we
were liberated in 1980. - Reyhana Masters, believer in justice
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