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Southern Africa: NGOs demand that
SADC leaders prove their commitment to gender equality
February 5, 2008 – (Pambazuka News) NGOs
meeting in Johannesburg have challenged leaders of the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) to put their money where their
mouths are by adopting a binding protocol for promoting gender equality
at their August summit.
In a statement following a three day strategy meeting,
members of the Southern African Gender Protocol Alliance[1] commended
the recent move by senior officials responsible for gender to strengthen
the draft SADC Protocol on Gender and Development that was watered
down and then deferred at the 2007 Heads of State summit in Lusaka.
The NGOs have, however, raised a number of key
areas that they believe are crucial for achieving gender equality
that are still missing from the current draft. The Alliance called
on South Africa's President Thabo Mbeki, who will be hosting the
2008 summit and has a progressive track record on gender issues,
to add his political weight to ensuring that these gaps are addressed.
The draft Protocol is one of the most ambitious
projects by governments of SADC to bring together all existing international
and regional commitments for achieving gender equality and enhance
these through measurable targets in all sectors.
In the making since 2005, the Protocol has gone
through seven different drafts, and faced major resistance ahead
of the 2007 summit, with key sections removed or whittled down by
senior officials from finance and trade-related ministries. Following
the instruction from leaders that there be "further consultation"
on the protocol, senior officials responsible for gender met in
Livingstone in December to try to salvage what they could of the
original draft, while taking note of concerns that it was too long
and prescriptive.
While the Lusaka draft reduced the targets to be
met by 2015 from 24 to 14, the Livingstone draft has 19 targets.
Sections on health, HIV and AIDS and the media that had been cross
referenced with existing SADC Protocols that make little or no reference
to gender have been reinstated, albeit in abbreviated form. The
language is considerably strengthened, and key issues such as maternity
and paternity leave reinstated.
The Alliance agreed, however, that there are eight
areas that have been dropped in the current draft of the Protocol
around which lobbying efforts will be focused between now and the
August summit in South Africa. The key demands of the consortium
are that:
* The Protocol state commitments using obligatory
language like "ensure" instead of "endeavour".
* The Protocol state explicitly that where there
are contradictions between customary law and Constitutional provisions
for gender equality the latter is given precedence.
* The rights of socially excluded and vulnerable
groups be recognised and protected.
* Marital rape, which is recognised in the 1997
SADC Declaration on Gender and Development that preceded the Protocol,
and is recognised in the laws of six SADC countries, should be reinstated
in the definition of gender violence. This is all the more urgent
in a region where an alarmingly high proportion of women newly infected
with HIV are home makers whose partners have been unfaithful.
* The recognition of the rights of cohabiting couples
to prevent the denial and loss of property and other rights in the
event of death or other circumstances that nullify the union. Cohabitation
is a fact in SADC countries, and lack of rights in these unions
is causing hardship, particularly for women and children.
* Strengthening of the gender dimensions of HIV
and AIDS, such as female controlled methods of contraception and
sexual rights which, if fully promoted, can significantly contribute
to halting and reversing the pandemic by 2015 in line with the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs).
* Strengthening of the provisions on education,
which in the amended form have lost their specificity on early childhood
development, career planning, vocational training and effective
policies in addressing school girl pregnancies.
* Reinstating of provisions in the otherwise strong
section on women's economic empowerment on access by women to government
and other state controlled procurement opportunities.
* The addition of specific targets for mainstreaming
gender in the media, and media practise.
* The Alliance roadmap involves intensive lobbying
and advocacy in-country and at a regional level, including offering
technical support where this may be required through to the August
summit, where it plans to hold a parallel civil society forum and
launch a high profile campaign for the adoption of a strong Gender
Protocol.
From:http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/wgender/45863
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