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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Towards parity for women in politics
Kudzai Makombe, Inter Press Service
August 23, 2008
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=43644
In a highly
contested election marred by violence and held under very difficult
economic conditions, Zimbabwean women politicians defied the odds
to participate as candidates in the March 29th elections.
In terms of seats actually
won, results fell far short of the 50 percent female representation
in political decision-making set out in the African Union (AU) Protocol
on Gender and Women's Human Rights or the recently signed Southern
African Development Community (SADC) Protocol on Gender and Development.
Women got just 14 percent of seats in parliamentary elections, down
from 16 percent female representation in the previous parliament.
However, at a national
conference held on 14th and 15th August in Zimbabwe's capital, Harare,
women celebrated the fact that they had participated as candidates
in their highest numbers ever.
"We managed
to mobilise each other to increase women's contestation by almost
50 percent," said Luta Shaba, executive director of the Women's
Trust, the organisation that has spearheaded the 'Women Can
Do It' campaign to get more women in politics.
Shaba explained that
while the parliamentary seats were highly contested by male candidates,
they showed less interest in the council seats. This opened space
for 740 women to participate at the local level. The experience
elected women councilors will gain will serve them well should they
decide to run for parliament or senate in future.
The Women's Trust and
other campaigners are already looking to the future. With negotiations
taking place between the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic
Front and the two Movement for Democratic Change factions, hopes
are high that the 2013 elections will be more conducive for women
candidates.
Civil society and other
actors are pushing for a negotiated settlement that will ultimately
lead to a new and more gender-sensitive constitution. In a communiqué,
participants in this month's 'Women Can Do It' conference called
for a change in the electoral system to a more gender-sensitive
one based on proportional representation.
They also demanded a
constitution that takes into account various regional and international
instruments promoting women's participation in decision-making.
"I didn't know this
election would be so difficult but I won't go backwards. I will
definitely do it again and I know I will win next time," said
Rosemary White, MDC candidate for Chitungwiza -- a satellite city
of Harare.
White campaigned using
her own money and with support from the 'Women Can Do It Campaign'.
After she was threatened with violence, she was forced to flee her
home, leaving behind her husband and children, and seek refuge at
the rural homestead of her grandmother.
Sceptics remain doubtful
that Zimbabwe will meet the targets set out by SADC, but the protocol
does spell out some measures that member states should take to increase
women's participation, including "...public awareness campaigns
which demonstrate the vital link between the equal representation
and participation of women and men in decision-making positions,
democracy, good governance and citizen participation..."
Precedents for
achieving the SADC and AU goals have been set by South Africa and
Mozambique. Both countries surpassed the 30 percent goal set out
in the 1997 SADC Declaration on Gender, the predecessor to the Protocol
on Gender. Political will at party level has been the primary factor
in their success, with the ruling African National Congress (ANC)
in South Africa, and the Front for the Liberation of Mozambique
(FRELIMO) setting party quotas for women's participation.
But the real example
has been set by Rwanda, which has the world's highest proportion
of women in parliament, at 48.8 percent. Rwanda has a constitutional
quota for national elections, as well as election law and legislative
quotas guaranteeing a women's agenda for all elected bodies.
What is clear from these
examples is that quotas, especially when combined with an electoral
system based on proportional representation, provide an opportunity
for women to play a role in politics.
The outcome of the ongoing
talks between Zimbabwe's three main political parties will have
a crucial impact on the immediate future for Zimbabwean women in
politics.
What women expect from
the talks in the immediate term is for the economy to improve and
the violence to end. Women have been hardest hit by the country's
economic crisis. They bear the burden of ensuring the survival of
their families where basic social services and goods are limited
or entirely unavailable and where incomes are consistently eroded
by spiraling inflation. According to Zimbabwe's Central Statistical
Office, annual inflation came in at 11.2 million percent at the
end of July.
Women were worst affected
by the politically-motivated violence that escalated ahead of the
June 27th presidential run-off election. As political activists,
mothers, daughters and wives, they were targeted for retribution.
Unlike most men who were able to flee their homes, women faced with
the responsibility of caring for their families and property were
forced to stay behind and face the perpetrators, some of who were
also women.
For the medium- to long-term,
the challenges are broader.
"It doesn't
matter what kind of structure comes up, what we are interested in
are the principles that will better serve us as women, including
an open democracy and non-violence," said Netsai Mushonga,
Coordinator of the Women's
Coalition of Zimbabwe at a press conference on women's participation
in the talks, held on 30th July. The Women's Coalition of Zimbabwe
is a coordinating group of women's rights groups made up of 44 members.
The coalition
is calling on negotiating parties to adhere to UN Resolution 1325
on Women, Peace and Security, which urges UN member states to ensure
increased representation of women at all decision-making levels
in national, regional and international institutions and mechanisms
for the prevention, management, and resolution of conflict.
They are also demanding
the inclusion of gender experts on the negotiating team and an open
process and role in the implementation plan.
Shaba reiterated a statement
made to weekly newspaper, the Sunday Mail, in which she urged the
negotiators to "seriously consider changing the electoral laws
for a system of proportional representation as the only electoral
process that can safeguard the interests of women."
For those women who have
made it into decision-making, the pressure is now on to make a difference
to the lives of other women.
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