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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Now
to share power with women
Tonderai
Kwidini, Inter Press Service
September 29, 2008
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=44059
The ink was
barely dry on the power-sharing agreement
signed by Zimbabwe's main political parties on Sep. 15 when
women activists demanded
a fair share of power for the fairer sex.
Half of all cabinet posts
should be for women, argued the Feminist Political Education Project
(FePEP), a pressure group led by the country's top gender
thinkers and leaders. Of the 31 ministers, 15 should be women, and
of the 15 deputy ministers, eight. Moreover, women should be appointed
to non-traditional, "hard ministries" such as foreign
affairs, home affairs, defense, local government, finance and trade.
The group wants to prevent
a repeat of the exclusion from the power-sharing talks, where there
was only one woman among eight negotiators.
This is not the first
time that the women's movement has criticised the male stranglehold
on the political process. In the impasse after the March elections,
FePEP lashed out at politicians who tear the country apart with
their "selfish male egos, the quest for unbridled power, and
total disregard for citizens' rights."
If the unity government
appointed women to half of the cabinet posts, said FePEP, it would
be showing its true commitment to gender equality, a core principle
in the agreement. It would also comply with the recently approved
Southern Africa Development Community Protocol on Gender, which
requires 50/50 male and female representation in government by 2015.
Moreover, appointing
women would build trust in the unity government, said FePEP.
These days, trust may
be a commodity as scarce as cooking oil and sugar. Zimbabweans endured
yet more political, economic and social hardship this year as they
staggered through a flawed and violent election, which left some
200 dead, and 25,000 displaced, according to the rights monitor
Zimbabwe Peace Project. Many instances of sexual violence against
female members of the opposition by pro-government militias were
documented.
Some human rights activists
believe that having more women in power will bring issues of justice
and redress to the fore. Jenni Williams, founder of the lobbying
group Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA), would like the new government
to provide psychological treatment for the victims of torture and
shelter for the displaced, prosecute perpetrators of political violence,
reform the army and police, repeal oppressive laws, and allow international
humanitarian aid.
But "nothing will
ever come out of this deal until women are included," she told
IPS.
Jameson Timba, a Member
of Parliament for the Movement for Democratic Change, notes some
positive steps towards gender parity.
Of the unity government's
executive -- a president, two deputy presidents, a prime minister
and two deputies -- two must be women. Timba adds that "at
least a third of the cabinet and ambassadorial positions will go
to women."
The Parliament and Senate
also have equitable representation, both in both political and gender
terms. The Parliament's speaker is an MDC man, Lovemore Moyo,
and the deputy speaker a woman, Nomalanga Khumalo. In the Senate,
the speaker is ZANU PF's Edna Madzongwe, with a male deputy,
Naison Ndlovu.
Others remain
skeptical about power-sharing among men and women. Among them is
Gladys Hlatswayo, advocacy officer at the umbrella group Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition.
"We have heard these
nice words before but, without political will, they do not mean
anything," she told IPS. "The power relations are uneven
and reflect the power struggles of the general Zimbabwean society."
For many women, bread
and butter issues are the priority. About 80 percent of the population
is unemployed and lives with less than $2 a day, according to the
United Nations. Life expectancy for women has dropped to 34 years
and seroprevalence stands at 20 percent.
Patience Chitapi, a mother
of two living in Harare's Glen View suburb, knows this first-hand.
"All I want is food
in the supermarket, medicine in the hospitals, water and electricity,
but I can't afford any of these basic needs, let alone personal
hygiene products. I believe women can address these issues better
than men," she told IPS.
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