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Zimbabwe: A Society 'Not Ready
for Female Leadership'?
March 14, 2008 – (AllAfrica) Women make up
about half the population in Zimbabwe. But, they're far from accounting
for 50 percent of those on the ballot for this month's general elections
in the Southern African country sparking concern amongst gender
activists.
None of the four presidential candidates in the
Mar. 29 ballot is a woman; during the last poll for head of state,
held in 2002, Elizabeth Madangure competed alongside five other,
male candidates.
Of the 730 parliamentary hopefuls, only 99 are
women (13.6 percent), while 63 of the 195 candidates running for
the senate are female (just over 32 percent) this according to figures
from the Women in Politics Support Unit (WiPSU), a non-governmental
organisation based in the capital of Harare.
Zimbabwe will also hold local government polls
at the end of the month; however, IPS could not obtain statistics
for the gender of local government candidates at the time of publishing
this report.
During the last legislative elections in March
2005, 57 women ran for parliament out of a total of 273 aspirants
(about 20.9 percent of candidates). Female candidates accounted
for 34 percent of those who contested senate polls in November 2005:
45 women were involved in this race, and 87 men (these figures again
provided by WiPSU).
Statistics for the number of women who contested
the last local government elections, in 2005, could not be obtained.
This year will mark the first instance in which
Zimbabwe holds presidential, parliamentary, senate and local government
polls on the same day, the result of a constitutional amendment
passed last year. General elections will now be held every five
years.
"From the figures, it shows that there is
a huge disparity (between female and male candidates) which needs
a lot of attention," said Luta Shaba, executive director of
the Women's Trust, a non-governmental organisation in Harare. The
trust has been at the forefront of the '50-50' campaign, an initiative
to have women account for half the names on the ballot.
"The question to ask is what is it that should
be done to increase the number of female candidates? Voting women
into parliament means that women's issues will become national issues."
For Rutendo Hadebe of the Women's Coalition of
Zimbabwe, an umbrella group for various rights organisations, having
more women candidates involves fighting chauvinism among political
parties, and encouraging women to believe that they can compete
for office successfully.
"The society that we are living in seems not
ready for female leadership," she told IPS. "But we are
saying as a movement that we will continue pushing."
The electoral race is largely focused on the ruling
Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF), the larger
faction of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), and the Mavambo/Kusile
of Simba Makoni a grouping also referred to as 'New Dawn'. Makoni,
an erstwhile ZANU-PF member and former finance minister, broke ranks
with the party to challenge President Robert Mugabe. ("Mavambo"
is a Shona word meaning "beginning", while "kusile"
from the Ndebele language means "dawn".) The MDC, Zimbabwe's
main opposition group for several years, split in 2005.
In the case of ZANU-PF, 44 of its 214 parliamentary
aspirants are women (20.6 percent) and 27 of 59 senate candidates
(almost 46 percent).
These figures (the latest available from the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission, or ZEC, at the time of publication) show the
party has some way to go in fulfilling its 2005 pledge to raise
the proportion of its female candidates to 30 percent across the
board.
"In instances that we have women volunteering
to take up political posts they are faced with...having to choose
whether to commit family resources to the political cause or feeding
the family," said a member of the ZANU-PF Women's League who
asked for anonymity. "Political parties do very little to support
women candidates financially, and there lies the problem."
A list of parliamentary and senate candidates from
the larger faction of the MDC, led by Morgan Tsvangirai, show this
party has 25 women among its 209 legislative candidates (just under
12 percent) along with 18 of the 60 senate aspirants (30 percent).
"We are not happy with the female figures
in this election," said Sekai Holland, the faction's secretary
for international relations, herself a senatorial candidate. "Getting
the female agenda going...remains a big fight."
The other MDC faction headed by Arthur Mutambara
is fielding 19 women in the parliamentary poll out of a total of
144 candidates (13.2 percent). Women also account for six of the
faction's 34 senate candidates (17.6 percent) this according to
figures from the ZEC.
Statistics published in the local press by Mavambo/Kusile
indicate the grouping will field eight women among its 51 parliamentary
candidates (15.7 percent) and three women among its nine senatorial
hopefuls (about 33 percent).
The polls will see all 210 parliamentary seats
being contested, compared to 120 in 2005. Previously, an additional
30 legislative seats were filled in part by presidential nominees,
bringing the total number of parliamentarians to 150.
In the case of the senate, 59 seats are to be filled
(a further 21 will go to traditional chiefs and presidential nominees,
amongst others). Initially, there were 60 senate seats in play for
the election; however, one of these has already been won by a ZANU-PF
candidate who was elected unopposed at the nomination court.
Local government candidates will compete for 1,968
posts. The Inter-Parliamentary Union notes that Zimbabwe presently
has 24 women in parliament (16 percent of legislators), and 24 in
the senate which currently has 66 members (giving women control
of approximately 36 percent of the upper house).
According to the ZEC, 17 parties are participating
in the elections; the Zimbabwe Electoral Support Network puts the
number of voters at some 5.6 million.
Even if all female candidates running in this month's
legislative and senate polls win, the country will still find itself
falling short of regional goals concerning women's representation
in government. A 1997 declaration by the Southern African Development
Community set Zimbabwe and other member states the target of having
women in 30 percent of decision-making posts by 2005 a goal since
adjusted to 50 percent.
This month's vote comes amidst political and economic
turmoil in Zimbabwe, where hyper-inflation and unemployment have
impoverished most citizens, and where food and fuel shortages are
the order of the day.
Human rights abuses that undermined the credibility
of previous polls continue, as Amnesty International noted in a
Jan. 24 press statement that detailed an assault on persons trying
to attend an MDC rally addressed by Tsvangirai.
"Police repeatedly arrest and beat human rights
defenders and MDC activists engaging in peaceful protest,"
said the rights watchdog.
"Amnesty International has corroborated evidence
of torture and ill-treatment of activists while in police custody..."
the statement added.
Mugabe, running for a sixth term in office (and
in power since independence in 1980), accuses Western nations of
conspiring with his opponents to undermine Zimbabwe, following a
controversial land redistribution campaign that saw farms owned
by minority whites confiscated for the resettlement of landless
blacks. A number of influential Zimbabweans stand accused of seizing
farms in the course of this campaign.
The European Union did introduce sanctions against
Zimbabwe in response to the problematic 2002 presidential elections;
and, the deteriorating situation in the country prompted the United
States to follow suit the next year. However, these measures involve
travel restrictions and asset freezes directed at high-ranking officials,
rather than steps against ordinary Zimbabweans.
The exclusion of election observer teams from countries
critical of the ZANU-PF government has deepened fears that the upcoming
polls will not be free and fair as have claims about manipulation
of the voters' roll and inadequate voter education.
From:http://allafrica.com/stories/200803150007.html?page=2
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