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AFRICA: Unclear policies
blamed for donor aid misuse
July 12, 2006 - (IRIN) African countries misuse
development aid from donors because of "unclear" policies,
Burundi's first vice-president, Martin Nduwimana, said at an ongoing
regional conference on gender and development in Bujumbura. "If
we [African governments] set up clear policies, which would put
an end to mismanagement, corruption and embezzlement, we will for
sure give a chance to the integration of women in all sectors,"
Nduwimana said on Tuesday in an opening address at the four-day
conference organised by the United Nations Development Fund for
Women (UNIFEM) and Burundi's ministry of national solidarity, human
rights and gender equality. He said to manage development aid well,
African women, urban and rural, should be at the heart of the fight
against poverty.
Participants from 22 African countries are taking
part in the conference, aimed at seeking ways to better manage development
aid in an equitable way. Nduwimana acknowledged that women had mostly
been excluded from Burundi's management, notably in higher government
posts. A great deal needed to be done on gender equality in Burundi,
but Nduwimana expressed satisfaction over progress to date. He said
since 2003, with the signing of a peace and reconciliation agreement,
the country had been putting into practice the requirement to allocate
30 percent of positions in the government's decision-making institutions
to women.
Seven of Burundi's 21 cabinet members are women,
including the second vice-president. The speaker of the parliament's
lower chamber is also a woman. "Sectors which have not finished
implementing the women's share should do it quickly for good governance
to lead to development," Nduwimana said. The minister in charge
of gender, Françoise Ngendahayo, said the aim of the conference
was to make aid accessible to all, but particularly women. "Development
which does not emphasise the role of women is doomed to failure,"
she said.
Participants are to use the conference to prepare
a forum on gender and integral development scheduled to take place
in Ghana in 2008. Besides Burundi, the countries represented at
the conference are: Botswana, Cameroon, the Central African Republic,
the Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya,
Liberia, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Republic of Congo, Rwanda,
Sierra Leone, Sudan, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and
Zimbabwe. The US is also participating in the conference as it hosts
the UNIFEM headquarters in New York.
From: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/2a697773f73bfcd2bd670a031f9810ef.htm
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