Namibia: Women in Swapo End
Up the Biggest Losers
December 3, 2007 – (AllAfrica) Women in Swapo were the
biggest losers at the just-ended congress despite promises that
they would have better representation at all top levels of the
party.
Although women made up close to 50 per cent of the delegates
at the congress, only three - Secretary General Pendukeni Iivula-Ithana,
Saara Kuugongelwa-Amathila and Dr Libertina Amathila - made it
into the Politburo. In fact, the party has gone backwards - in
2002 four of the 21 Politburo members were women.
When Deputy Speaker Doreen Sioka joined in June this year, the
Politburo actually had five female members. Of the Central Committee's
83 members, only 18 female delegates made it to the final list.
The last Central committee had 19 women (23 per cent). The Southern
African Development Community declaration on gender and development
commits member countries to achieving 50 per cent women's representation
in political and decision-making structures.
Namibia is a signatory to the Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Discrimination against Women (Cedaw), the Beijing
Platform for Action and the SADC Declaration on Gender and Development.
The country also has its own National Gender Policy through which
it promised to increase female participation at all levels of
politics and decision-making. Gender balance activists claim Swapo
is merely paying lip service on the gender front.
The party's Women Council promised last year to push for 50 per
cent representation in the top decision-making bodies and in the
National Assembly. They decided to lobby for changing the ruling
party's constitution to require half of the party's Politburo,
Central Committee and MPs in the next National Assembly to be
women.
Yesterday, newly elected Secretary General Pendukeni Iivula-Ithana
said she was disappointed by the developments. "The party
is seized with the issue. It needs everybody's involvement. Democracy
has its own way of sorting things out," she said. Swapo does
not have a policy on gender equality.
Ithana said the new leadership would work on formulating clear
directives. In 2002 former Swapo President Sam Nujoma was forced
to drop plans to nominate 21 women to the Swapo Central Committee.
He was given legal advice that it was illegal but the resistance
also took the form of claims of dictatorial behaviour being levelled
at him.
A resolution was passed at the 1997 congress already to increase
the proportion of women delegates to the party's congress up to
50 per cent. If Nujoma had had his way in nominating the 21 women,
it would have left only 36 positions available in the election
for the Central Committee.
Many party stalwarts, most of them Ministers, feared they would
have lost out to people who would have been "brought in by
wheelchair", in terms of an expression widely used by Swapo
members. Having failed to get 50 per cent female representation,
Nujoma, responding to lobbying by some in the Women's Council
leadership, decided to push for a quota on the Central Committee
but once again failed.
A decision was taken at the 2002 congress that in future the
congress should "consider reserving the first 21 seats"
on the Central Committee for "women comrades". Yet again,
that was not achieved at the last congress and the party's gender
balance has gone from bad to worse.
In Government, 27 per cent of Ministers and 25 per cent of Deputy
Ministers are women. Women Parliamentarians make up 27 per cent
while 23 per cent of Permanent Secretaries and 24 per cent of
Deputy Permanent Secretaries are women. Women make up around 32
per cent of the directors and heads of departments in the civil
service.
From:http://allafrica.com/stories/200712030866.html