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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Women
demand more
Vusumuzi Sifile,
The Standard (Zimbabwe)
September 27, 2008
http://www.thezimbabwestandard.com/local/18996-women-demand-more-here.html
Women's rights
activists want to add another sticking point to the contentious
issue of cabinet appointments: they are demanding that key ministries
should be headed by women.
They also want
women to head at least 30% of the 31 ministries created under the
power-sharing deal
between Zanu PF and the two MDC formations.
This however
could be a shot in the dark as all the parties are said to have
completed their most likely line-ups for different portfolios. Most
of the posts are held by men. Fewer women that are being proposed
were elected into the two houses of Parliament.
Among the organisations
pushing for the deal is the Women
in Politics Support Unit (WiPSU) and the Feminists Political
Education Project (FePEP). They say this is "not too far fetched"
as it is in line with a protocol adopted by Sadc heads of state
in South Africa last month.
Officials from
the two organisations confirmed they were pushing for more women
to be appointed to Cabinet and for the appointment of women to key
ministries. They however could not be drawn into divulging the names
in their proposals.
WiPSU director,
Cleopatra Ndlovu said: "Right from the talks, the representation
of women left a lot to be desired. Everything was telling a male
story, even the picture. And now we are talking about cabinet, this
is where issues of power between men and women are going to be demonstrated."
She said the
agreement makes a commitment to involve women, but there is no suggestion
how this would be carried out.
"Having
read the agreement, it talks about women in a way that the principals
acknowledge women have to be put in strategic positions. But we
don't see the actual action plan to involve women. It appears they
just talk about women, just to appease us."
Theresa Mugadza,
a co-ordinator of FePEP, said they had "engaged with the negotiators
at various times about the inclusion of women".
"We have
written to them, but there's not been any formal response,"
Mugadza said.
Asked about
their proposals, Mugadza said: "I cannot start giving you names
now."
But sources
in the women's movement said Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga - who
ironically is one of the FePEP co-ordinators and took part in the
negotiations that led to the power sharing deal - tops the list
of the feminists' suggestions. Her name has also appeared in a number
of possible cabinet line-ups currently being circulated.
According to
our sources, some feminists want Misihairabwi-Mushonga to head either
the Ministry of Industry and Commerce or Regional Integration and
International Trade, which are understood to have been given to
her formation. The proposal is based on Misihairabwi-Mushonga's
background as a former chairperson of the Parliamentary public accounts
committee and MDC's shadow Minister of Foreign Affairs.
"We look
forward to the appointment of women to strategic ministries such
as foreign affairs, home affairs, defence, local government, finance,
trade, health and education just to name a few - something like
what they have in South Africa," added Mugadza.
Section 20 of
the agreement signed on September 15 acknowledges "the need
for gender parity, particularly the need to appoint women in strategic
Cabinet posts".
The FePEP, through
Mugadza, even suggested how the ministries would be distributed.
"For avoidance
of doubt, out of the 31 ministerial positions, 15 should be women
and of the 15 deputy ministers, 8 should be women. Of the 15 cabinet
posts Zanu PF has, at least seven ought to be women; of the 13 cabinet
posts that MDC-T has, at least seven ought to be women and of the
three seats MDC has, at least one has to be a woman. Of the eight
deputies Zanu PF appoints, four have to be women, the six MDC led
by Tsvangirai appoints, three ought to be women and the one deputy
of the MDC led by Prof. Mutambara must be a woman."
But Luta Shaba,
the director of Women's
Trust -a Harare based organisation said: "For us, what
is more critical however is to have an institutional mechanism to
oversee the commitment to issues of gender representation. It does
not matter what percentage we have, if there is nobody to oversee
the implementation it won't work. It is not about numbers, it is
about walking our talk."
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