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Namibia: Women Must Stand Up,
Be Counted
March 18, 2008 – (AllAfrica) The South African
Women in Dialogue (SAWID) recently met with women of Namibia to
discuss ways in which the local women can organise themselves in
their diversity and act together for a better future.
The meeting, held under the theme "Women unite
in action and act in unity for development", was attended by
prominent women in the country including the Minister of Gender
Equality and Child Welfare Marlene Mungunda and her deputy Angelika
Muharukua, Joan Guriras, Deputy Minister of Health and Social Services
Petrina Haingura, leaders of women empowerment organisations such
as the Executive Director of Women Action for Development Veronica
de Klerk, and women leaders in business like Anna Thandeka-Gerbhart.
South African High Commissioner to Namibia Eunice
Komane said the one-day meeting was about a sisterhood trying to
share experiences and seek solutions to problems women face in society,
especially poverty.
The time has come for Namibian women regardless
of their backgrounds to voice their concerns and have their status
in society improved, she said. Minister Mungunda said women in Namibia
remain disadvantaged in many different sectors.
Although those in rural areas account for 59 percent
of those engaged in skilled subsistence work, they have unequal
access to land, labour, agricultural services and assets, natural
resources and employment opportunities. They are further under-represented
in decision-making and leadership positions.
Because they are undermined at different levels,
most women are engaged in petty trade and other informal sector
activities while their male counterparts dominate activities with
high profit margins.
To address that problem, Mungunda revealed that
her ministry in collaboration with Pan-African Women Organisation
(PAWO) is in the process of implementing a rural women economic
empowerment programme. A conference on rural women is scheduled
before mid-year.
"This meeting with SAWID will give the ministry
clarity on crucial issues beneficial to the development of rural
women in Namibia," she said.
SAWID General Manager Girlie Njoni said poverty
carries the face of a woman mainly because of inequalities rooted
from past years.
She said that women are poor and still have many
responsibilities such as caring for Orphans and Vulnerable Children,
the elderly and the sick.
Many governments have signed and ratified many
international instruments, yet little has been done to change the
miserable status of women in society.
"The need is to unite now and act for development.
We need to unite now and fight these wars that are anti-development,"
she urged local women.
While there are some cultural nuisances that guard
against emancipation of women and also compromise development, Njoni
told Namibian women to be vigilant.
"Women of Namibia should not be deterred,
they can always start something and fight poverty in all its dimensions,"
she said.
Another member of SAWID Bibi Kahn said the organisation
has identified five dialogue programmes that Namibian women could
also get involved in. These include poverty alleviation, racial
integration, harnessing ICT, moral regeneration and promotion of
BEE and its charters.
"Through our weekly meetings where we discuss
burning issues of the time, women now embrace diversity and have
learnt that survival is in the collective," she said.
Speaking from experience as a woman, Kahn says
creating dialogue among women removes all the fears, brings healing,
breaks barriers and brings an ending to ignorance.
SAWID is an independent South African Women's Platform
committed to hearing the voice of every woman and to improving the
status of women by engaging national governments, the private sector,
civil society, (including non-governmental organisations, community-based
organisations, faith-based organisations and donors) in partnership
to shape community, provincial and continental agendas.
From:http://allafrica.com/stories/200803180189.html
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