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Women’s Rights Big
Priority for Ghanaian Judge
By: Katy Glassborow
August 31, 2006 - (IWPR) Judge Akua Kuenyehia's
office, on the top floor of the International Criminal Court in
The Hague, is filled with Africa. There are maps of the continent,
African art on the walls and a shelf of beautiful African carvings.
Judge Kuenyehia, one of three female African judges at the ICC,
is first vice-president of the court. And because all the cases
currently at the ICC are African, the Ghanaian judge feels that
her knowledge of her home continent serves her well.
For example, she and her colleagues had to approve
the forms that victims of war crimes fill in if they want to take
advantage of the court’s unprecedented move to allow them
to have a greater involvement in proceedings. "When people
run away from conflict they often take nothing with them, so we
cannot ask them to produce passports, email addresses or paperwork,"
explained Judge Kuenyehia.
As well as being first vice president, Judge Kuenyehia
is also one of the judges in the pre-trial division, which deals
with preliminary issues, including admissibility of cases and the
confirmation of charges against an accused. This means she assesses
all the evidence that Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo brings
against a war crimes suspect, and decides with the other pre-trial
judges whether a case should come to trial.
A former lecturer in criminal law, gender law and
international human rights law at the University of Ghana, Judge
Kuenyehia has co-authored several books and influential papers on
how law is interpreted and implemented throughout her continent.
She told IWPR she has spent many hours arguing over cases with her
husband, who is still a practising lawyer in Ghana. She has sought
to encourage African women to gain a better understanding of the
law, setting up networks of female professionals who go out into
communities to promote awareness of legal rights and issues.
She represented Ghana on the United Nations' Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women,
CEDAW, committee in 2003 and worked hard to contribute to its reputation
and influence. Joana Foster, senior gender adviser to the UN mission
in Liberia, said Judge Kuenyehia mobilises people in conventions
such as CEDAW, helping to build organisations so influential that
governments have little choice but to listen. Foster said the judge
has helped a number of organisations become strong political players,
including Women in Law and Development in Africa, the Federation
of Women Lawyers in Ghana and the Gender and Human Rights Documentation
Centre.
Judge Kuenyehia is particularly interested in using
her legal expertise to identify problems - and find solutions. Under
traditional customary law, women in Africa south of the Sahara do
not inherit property, and even though legislation was passed in
1985 to give women inheritance rights in her native Ghana Judge
Kuenyehia said that getting the law to work is an entirely different
matter. "Customary law is not written, but is deeply ingrained
in both men and women," she said. "But we cannot live
in a world where fifty per cent of the population is cut off from
the very resource that will help them progress."
She realised that education was key, and that practical
training is essential to enable women to understand, and access,
their rights. With other women lawyers, Judge Kuenyehia set up legal
services centres in Accra and Kumasi to help Ghanaian women who
previously thought the law only applied to them if they were in
trouble with the police.
"Going out and meeting these women gave me
insight into how the law impacts their lives, which helped me realise
where we needed to push for changes in the law," she said.
She realised that in order for the law to be responsive to people,
they needed to be consulted first, "We should never underestimate
the intelligence of people."
Foster said that before attending the UN World
Conference on Women in Beijing in 1995, Judge Kuenyehia got all
the Ghanaian representatives to "go to the markets in Ghana
and talk to the women, listen to their concerns and find out their
needs." Foster said this meant the representatives identified
where women had gaps in knowledge over their rights and entitlements,
and were then able to go to Beijing and plan strategies to simplify
the law and raise awareness.
Consequently, Judge Kuenyehia advocates law training
for traditional leaders like Queen Mothers - the inherited title
of Ghanaian female leaders who ultimately decide who are elected
Chiefs of their communities. "She works with Queen Mothers
and trains them, so that when the Chief is sitting in a traditional
court they can give him sound gender advice," said Foster.
As well as practical training, Judge Kuenyehia's
Women and Law in West Africa gender research centre in Accra also
works to confront the government with reliable statistics to back
up the need for revised laws. For example, the centre found that
three out of every ten women in Ghana are beaten by their husbands,
and now a domestic violence bill is going through the legislative
process. "We are consulting all shades of opinion so that when
the law is passed there is a feeling that it will be responsive
to the views of all people," she said.
The centre also looks beyond Ghana across Africa
to research and share best practice. Cynthia Grant Bowman, a professor
of Law at Northwestern University in the United States, who co-authored
Gender and Law in Sub-Saharan Africa with Judge Kuenyehia, said
she has a sensitivity to legal problems, having seen them in reality
on the ground. "The law cannot wave a magic wand, but can only
change real world problems slowly by political means," said
Bowman. Despite the many attempts at statutory reform, a large percentage
of African populations live in areas governed by traditional customary
law, rather than by written laws. "Women cannot take advantage
of the new laws, as it would put them outside the community upon
which they depend," said Bowman.
She added that Judge Kuenyehia knows that those
drafting new laws must see how people have traditionally been governed
in order to understand the impact of changed laws on their lives,
and be sensitive to the ramifications. "There is a toughness
about her which means she will not have the wool pulled over her
eyes," said Bowman, stressing that Judge Kuenyehia knows that
although most African countries have adopted all the international
human rights treaties some only pay them lip service. The judge
seeks to mitigate this discrepancy through networks such as the
Women's Lawyers Association in Ghana - where she encourages female
professionals to act as mentors for girls in remote villages.
"When we go to visit, the women are surprised
to see women lawyers. They say 'Can my daughter be a lawyer?' and
we say 'Yes, but only if you keep them in school.'" This is
a lesson that Judge Kuenyehia - the eldest of six siblings, five
of whom are university educated - learnt from her own mother, who
was a school headmistress in Ghana. "There was no argument
about education in my family," she said. She first went to
the University of Ghana, and then on to Oxford University in the
UK – an academic institution she had always wanted to attend
since she daydreamed about "the best school in the world"
with her father as a young child.
Judge Kuenyehia talks of her mother as an excellent
role model, and remembers watching her teaching while carrying her
infant son on her back in the classroom, "It made a profound
impact on my life because she demonstrated that you can be a mother
and a professional." When the judge was a herself a young mother
lecturing at the University of Ghana, her nanny quit, so she took
her children to work and told them to be quiet at the back of the
classroom. "After one week the Dean called me into the office
and told me he was very impressed, and that other women might have
sat at home and complained about not having child care," said
Judge Kuenyehia.
For her own children, a post-graduate Masters degree
is seen as the minimum education qualification to aspire to. Her
son is a lawyer, and he recently returned to Ghana to set up his
own firm. And her older daughter lives in London working in finance
while her youngest daughter is about to start her Masters degree
at the London School of Economics. She feels that women have to
prove they are better than men in order to be a success, and has
taken on a personal commitment to fund one girl through high school
in Ghana every three years.
"I mentor a lot of young girls because even
though education is widespread, it is not widespread enough - girls
lose out when parents are hard pressed and will be pulled out of
school to help with trading," she said. Foster feels that this
insight into the status of women in Africa stands Judge Kuenyehia
in good stead for her work at the ICC, "She knows women face
a lot more challenges, and will make sure they have special measures,
appropriate facilities, and are treated on an equal level."
From : http://www.iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=323517&apc_state=henpacr
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