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Gender activists call for decisive
action on Zimbabwe
April 24, 2008 – (ZimEye) Southern African
gender activists have called on their leaders and the international
community to "act decisively" in ending the Zimbabwean
crisis which threatens all peace loving citizens, especially women
and children.
They have specifically urged Angolans to refuse
entry to a shipment of arms headed for Zimbabwe from China after
citizen action in South Africa led to the shipment being diverted
from Durban harbour at the weekend.
The full statement of the Southern Africa Gender
Protocol Alliance reads:
"As organisations campaigning for the adoption
of a protocol on gender and development in the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) we have watched with growing anxiety
the deteriorating situation in Zimbabwe following the 29 March polls.
The recounting of votes long after the stipulated
period for complaints to be lodged and the fact that the results
of the presidential poll have still not been announced is a flagrant
disregard of the rule of law. Security clampdowns on ordinary citizens
reflect a desperate regime determined to survive through brute force.
The fragile gains made for gender equality in Zimbabwe
have all but been reversed. In the election results announced so
far, the proportion of women in the national assembly has declined
from 16% to 13%. The target set in the draft Protocol on Gender
and Development that will go before heads of state at their August
summit in South Africa is 50% women in all areas of decision-making
by 2015.
As Zimbabwe has turned from breadbasket of the
region to a basket case for food aid, women and children have borne
the brunt of the suffering. Women ply the four borders of the country
exchanging sexual favours for food to feed their children. Political
violence is invariably accompanied by gender violence, already high
in the SADC region.
We applaud the port workers in Durban for refusing
to offload the tonnes of Chinese arms headed for Zimbabwe to suppress
armless civilians. We also applaud the two religious leaders who
sought a court injunction to the arms while leaders of South Africa
appeared to turn a blind eye to the appalling suffering of Zimbabwean
people. This shows that where democratic institutions are in tact,
the will of the people can overcome political procrastination and
opportunism.
We call on the people of Angola to follow the lead
of ordinary South Africans by refusing to allow their country to
be a conduit for the death cargo now heading to Harare via Luanda.
We also call on all governments of the SADC region, and members
of the United Nations, to be true to the goals of these organisations
by acting decisively in ending the crisis in Zimbabwe."
From:http://zimeye.com/article0211240408.html
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