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WOZA
founder Williams receives French Order of Merit
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
November 27, 2011
I wish to thank
you for the for the recognition given to myself and Women of Zimbabwe
Arise (WOZA). WOZA has 80 000 members and over 500 leaders and as
I stand here I am humbled. I know that my presence here today is
not because of status or cleverness, it is because of the blood,
sweat and tears of real people fighting to be respected as citizens
of Zimbabwe. And so I salute the members of WOZA who decided enough
is enough, signed up and became activists.
WOZA was formed
to give voice to ordinary women and to demand social justice for
all Zimbabweans. We did not set out to seek recognition beyond that
of our own government to respect us as citizens and to recognise
our concerns as legitimate. We long for the award of real peace
and dignity in Zimbabwe.
When I formed
WOZA with late Sheba Dube I never imagined we would grow into the
movement that WOZA is today and I could not have done it without
the support and sacrifice of my family and comrades, Magodonga Mahlangu
and many others.
I pay tribute
to their courage, their commitment and determination to see a new
Zimbabwe in their lifetime. To be a member of WOZA is to be one
amongst many fearlessly brave women and men. I am proud that they
count me as their sister and mother.
In WOZA we believe
that it is not too late for the political leadership to return to
the promises of the liberation war for respect for one person one
vote, equality and a right to an education. Enough blood has been
spilt in a violent war for these ideals.
WOZA members
fight tirelessly but this time non-violently so that we can see,
feel and enjoy those promises as daily realities.
The National
Order of Merit award you have given me today is recognition that
WOZA has empowered thousands of community activists, making them
champions for change. The Act- Recruit - Train and Organise model
we use enables WOZA to be a strong amplifier of people voices. They
understand what they want and know how to demand all their socio-economic,
political and cultural rights. This award will also help to lift
the profile of these champions and protect them from abuse and torture
and may even save their lives - we thank you for this. But this
award should serve as notice to the perpetrators of violence that
France is watching and French citizens want to see genuine peace
in Zimbabwe.
We believe that
the political temperature in too high and that if something is not
done more lives will be lost in the name of elections.
We are worried
about the dedicated campaign against Matabeleland, the de-industrialisation
and whole scale loss of jobs will surely mean starvation and hardship
- this campaign has the look of a modern day Gukurahundi. I pray
this time round the international community will not remain silent.
As we write our new constitution we must careful craft devolution
of power and control of natural recourses laws so that locals can
genuinely benefit from the wealth they live amongst but very often
to do get to enjoy.
As I close my
acceptance speech, I wish remind you all that the 16 days Campaign
begins today. Recently the Zimbabwe Republic Police reported that
124 women were raped in 11 days. In this harsh economic climate,
there is no peace in our homes and women are the punching bag. It
is said that sexual harassment is experienced by up to 70 % of women
and I am one of the 70%. Women aged 15-44 are more at risk from
rape and domestic violence than from cancer, car accidents, war,
and malaria. This year the theme is From Peace in the Home to Peace
in the World: Let's Challenge Militarism and End Violence against
Women. The time has come for a code RED against rape of women and
girls.
I thank you
On Friday 25th
November 2011 at 4:00 pm, WOZA founder and national coordinator
Jenni Williams was awarded the French National Order of Merit at
a ceremony at the residence of the French Ambassador, Francois Ponge
in Harare.
The award given
by the French President Nicolas Sarkozy on recommendation of the
French Embassy, to recognise Williams for relentlessly engagement
in advocating for democracy and human rights, especially for women
in Zimbabwe.
The ceremony
was attended by WOZA members, Civic society leaders and invited
guests.
Magodonga Mahlangu
also spoke at the ceremony and thanked the French Government for
acknowledged WOZA founder Jenni Williams.
Visit
the WOZA fact
sheet
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