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Women’s Vote Tilts Balance
in DRC’s Constitutional Referendum
3 out of 5 voters women
January 20, 2006 - (UNIFEM) Kinshasa — The people of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC) voted a resounding "yes" at
their Constitutional Referendum held in December 2005. The referendum
was the first time in decades that Congolese went to the polls to
decide on their country's future.
The results of the referendum, announced by the President of the
Independent Electoral Commission in January this year, showed that
women had turned out in significant numbers to cast their votes.
60% of all voters were women, and 72% of the more than 9 million
women registered as voters chose to endorse their Constitution.
The strength of the female vote, and the increased participation
of women during the constitutional process, points to the importance
of taking into account the specific needs of women during electoral
and constitutional processes. It highlights the value of creating
favourable conditions for equal access of women and men to electoral
mandates and electoral offices, thereby improving governance structures
and providing widely accepted and more sustainable solutions to
the country's peaceful development.
UNIFEM partnered with UNDP and MONUC to provide technical and financial
support to the DRC's Independent Electoral Commission to ensure
women's participation in the referendum. An outreach and education
strategy included dissemination of the Constitution, training and
information sessions, and raising media awareness of gender issues
within the constitutional context. Women were encouraged to conduct
"sensitization and mobilization" activities where they
went door to door on foot and in "caravans" of cars, motorcycles
and bicycles to speak directly to people in their various communities
and neighbourhoods. The UN agencies estimated that at least 50,500
women were reached directly and many thousands more indirectly.
The Constitution includes key gender equality principles among
other fundamental principles. The major challenge now is the successful
adoption by parliament of an electoral law that will guarantee equal
opportunities for men and women to claim their civic rights and
participate in their country's development. UNIFEM is continuing
to work with Congolese women by supporting a critical mass of women
and men parliamentarians, and supporting women's mobilizing and
advocacy activities with the media and the public in the lead-up
to the adoption of the electoral law. UNIFEM is also assisting women
in preparing to participate as candidates, voters, mobilizers and
observers in the upcoming elections in less than six months' time,
when Congolese will go to the polls again to choose their leaders.
For more information, please contact Miranda Tabifor, Gender Advisor,
UNIFEM DRC, miranda.tabifor[at]undp.org
From: http://www.unifem.org/news_events/story_detail.php?StoryID=397
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