|
South Africa: Women, the state
and Africa
September 21, 2007 - (Pambazuka News) Amina Mama
writes, As South Africa debates the political challenges associated
with the ANC’s year-end conference at Polokwane, this is perhaps
a good moment to think beyond immediate struggles and to consider
what women have achieved beyond the borders of this country.
When the 50th anniversary of the famous Women’s March took
place a little more than a year ago, the highly visible participation
of senior government and party officials was striking, but not entirely
unfamiliar on the African landscape.
The African public has seen many official women’s
rallies. Mobutu Sese Seko’s ceremonial “mass promotion”
of women as wives and mothers, the media spectaculars featuring
Nigeria’s overdressed military wives, and the populist parades
of Nana Konadu’s December 31 Women’s Movement in Ghana
are not far back in our collective memory.
In post-apartheid South Africa, however, those attending last year’s
Women’s Day rally had somewhat better credentials. Many of
the marchers were led by women who risked their lives and liberty
to free their nation and many of them have come into government
equipped with liberatory vision and direct experience of political
struggle.
But perhaps the most distinguishing moment came when President Thabo
Mbeki widely regarded as the most progressive of Africa’s
presidents on gender matters took a highly critical stance on the
record of his own government. “We have failed our women,”
he announced in his address to the crowds. Following this, key public
figures were moved to call for the launch of a progressive women’s
movement.
While the realisation that women need to remobilise in the post-apartheid
context is not new, the call has not come generally from women within
government circles. One of the key lessons of Africa, where state-directed
mobilisations of women have been a regular feature of national politics,
has been that women’s movements need to retain a degree of
independence from the state and ruling parties.
Perhaps there is an assumption that South Africa is different and
there are important differences. Yet the call arises also from the
frustration of failure as evidenced in the yawning gap between legal
and policy reforms enacted by the state, and the realities of women’s
lives outside the new ruling elite.
Broader economic policies that constrain public spending and cut
institutional incapacities are among the factors that have severely
curtailed the effectiveness of the legal and policy gains of the
post-apartheid era. Whether an officially sanctioned “progressive
women’s movement” would be able to put pressure on government
is highly questionable. The record suggests otherwise that effective
change is contingent on the level of mobilisation outside the official
arena.
The fact that gender activism has focused so much on the legal and
policy arenas of the nation state has posed a long-standing dilemma
for feminist movements in Africa and women’s increased entry
into the structures of power has not resolved it.
Women’s movements have continued to mobilise from outside,
calling the state to account, and African governments have responded
as governments do with structures, policies and modest representation
in decision-making. Africa has led the world in the establishment
of official structures for women, from ministries to desks and,
in some countries, significant numbers of women have been either
elected or appointed to senior posts. Gender policy activism has
yielded a number of national and regional policies that pertain
to women’s rights and activists have pursued legal reforms
at constitutional level and in civil law.
Women’s activism has produced results all over the continent,
but these continue to be constrained in the face of state institutions
that remain overwhelmingly patriarchal and in contexts where legal
redress remains beyond the reach of most women. Often legal reforms
coexist alongside economic policies that compromise their realisation.
The increased attention to human and women’s rights has coincided
with economic reform packages that divest the public sector, worsen
women’s poverty and render the law less accessible than ever.
The fragility and powerlessness of the state in large swathes of
Africa, and the uncivil nature of the forces that emerge to fill
the gaps, give cause for concern. In places such as Sierra Leone
or Liberia, where there is mass illiteracy and up to three-quarters
of the women have been raped, what are the prospects for civil peace
and reducing widespread violence?
The era of democratic governance has seen a resurgence of cultural
and religious discourses, often fomented by men of means (but not
of vision) who manipulate “tradition” to vie for votes.
Ironically, women have supported demands for returning to practices
such as virginity-testing, witch-hunting and public castigation.
Perhaps women hope these developments will afford them levels of
protection and dignity that they have been long deprived of during
the years of misrule. But which women benefit? These resurgences
target women who are economically weak, young and, above all, lacking
the protection of powerful men.
Indeed, powerful men are often the perpetrators of the “morally
indefensible” behaviours that led to the condemnation of women
and might even have been tasked with protecting them. Jacob Zuma’s
case is not the only one that comes to mind.
Yet this is no simple matter because local personal and political
exigencies now resonate within a more global frame in which questions
of masculine dignity are threatened in many parts of the world,
under the rubric of the United States-led “war on terror”.
Politics and culture make a strange brew in contemporary politics.
Women even those with gender activist credentials can find themselves
pitted against one another in a manner that deflects public attention
away from more substantial gender interests. It can be hard to keep
our eyes on the prize in all this sound and fury.
These machinations aside, the fact is that where we do have significantly
more women leaders in parliaments and government structures, it
is as a result of long struggles by women. We have every right to
commend the new women within the state and feel a sense of pride
in them. However, it is clear that the relationship between the
institutions of the state and women’s movements need to be
negotiated with care.
The difficulties of negotiating women’s interests are typified
in the oil belt of Nigeria, a region where profits in excess of
$350-billion have been generated since the Seventies, but where
more than 90-million people live below the poverty line. Women led
the protest movement against the oil companies peacefully in the
Eighties and Nineties and, when this failed, they mounted a series
of sporadic direct actions between 2000 and 2003 that shut down
much of Nigeria’s oil production.
The US-backed Nigerian military action that has greeted these protests
signals a new level of direct repression in the context of global
economic policies that breed or simply ignore social injustice.
Even so, the mobilisation and leadership exercised by this movement
points to women’s capacity to resist the excesses of globalisation.
The post-colonial experiences of women in Africa offer us much insight
into the manner in which powerful political and class interests
operate. Local women’s movements find themselves engaging
not just with their own governments, but with international strategic
interests. Washington is setting about building military bases in
at least six African locations, while seeking a home for its new
Africa Command. Women’s critical perspectives on militarisation
need to be mobilised to challenge our governments and to resist
the “global” interests that encroach on our lives each
day.
African women have been at the receiving end of globalisation through
their direct experience of the development failure that manifests
in lives cut short, lives lived out in poverty, lives lived in fear
and vulnerability to violence and disease. It is in Africa and upon
the bodies and lives of African women, in particular, that the effects
of Western policy dictates have done their worst damage.
Perhaps our continent’s greatest resource is its accumulated
historical experience. Demystifying the forces that confront this
region and realising our liberatory vision requires that we learn
the lessons offered by the history of women’s resistance to
oppression. Women are uniquely placed to pursue the struggle for
freedom and to eradicate the divisive manifestations of oppression
that continue to persist in our minds as much as in the structures
of power. Women of Africa unite!
From:http://www.zeleza.com/blogging/african-affairs/women-state-and-africa
|