DRC: Women remain
under represented in government
March 10, 2005 (IRIN) - Women are still under
represented at decision-making levels in the Democratic Republic
of Congo's (DRC’s) institutions, reduced to the role of house
help and have even become victims of repeated sexual violence, women's
representatives said on Tuesday during the International Women's
Day.
"Though it is the woman who is, in many cases, the sole breadwinner
of the family in times of crisis aggravated by war, she is the first
victim of sexual violence," said Marie-Ange Lukiana Mufwankol,
a senator and vice president of the Parti du peuple pour la reconstruction
et le developpement. Congolese President Joseph Kabila heads Mufwankol's
party.
The frustrations of Congolese women are evident in the Senate, which
is debating a new constitution ahead of elections, due sometime
this year.
Mufwankol said women were still under represented in such bodies
despite the country being a signatory to international treaties
and conventions aimed at protecting and promoting women's rights.
The UN Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) gender adviser, Miranda
Kabefor, told IRIN that women were far from attaining 30 percent
representation in decision-making bodies of the government - the
Senate, the National Assembly, and heads of public firms. She said
more concrete action was needed.
"Women no longer want simple slogans or vain words by pretentious
[official] authorities," she said.
There were, she said, just nine women among the 61 ministers and
vice ministers in the transitional government, and only 60 women
sit in the two chambers of the 620-member parliament. The same situation
prevails in state-owned firms.
One reason for the low representation of women in state bodies could
be a reflection of their low enrolment in school. UN Children's
Fund (UNICEF) statistics illustrate this.
According to UNICEF, 49 percent of Congolese girls, or less than
one in two girls, go to school. However, their enrolment has improved
as a result of a yearlong UNICEF campaign titled "All girls
to School". This campaign consists of offering registration
and a year's free tuition scholarship to girls of school age.
"During the 2004 campaign, the number of girls going to school
surpassed 50.3 percent, which is a huge improvement," Mohamed
Fall, the UNICEF education programme administrator, said.
"Within the network of Congolese women, we have been able to
end this idea that boys must be favoured by sending only them to
school and keeping girls to do housework in preparation for a sometimes
precarious marriage," Kabefor added.
For Solange Kambidi, the president of the Women's Union, this kind
of thinking propels many men to forbid their wives, even if they
have attained university education, from working in offices for
fear they may be harassed.
"Harassment is a reality in our society, but it is the very
men who stop their wives from working who are the ones harassing
other women," Kambidi said.
However, women do sometimes harass men sexually. The network of
women is conscious of this and warned:
"Women should, above all, tell the truth about their ability
to worsen the problem with their scanty dressing or their attractiveness,"
Kambidi added.
Congolese women are fighting back. They are demanding that the family
code be modified.
"Women are fighting, at the level of the minister of human
rights and national solidarity, with the view to obtaining a change
in the law that set out working conditions and that women must get
their husbands' permission before they can travel or get jobs,"
Kabefor said.
From: http://www.irinnews.org./report.asp?ReportID=46034&SelectRegion=Great_Lakes&SelectCountry=DRC
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