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WOMEN PREPARE TO MAKE THEIR MARK
IN ELECTIONS
October 28, 2003 - (IPS) Ghana is scheduled to hold
both presidential and parliamentary elections next year a
prospect that has galvanized the countrys women. A series
of meetings is being held nationwide to draft a womens manifesto
for the two polls. Organisers hope this will end a situation where
as they put it women have been left behind in the
democratisation process.
Even though women are assumed to be equal citizens, they are
usually limited in the way they engage the political process during
elections, says Rose Kutin Mensah, Director of Abantu for
Development a non-profit advocacy group which is at the forefront
of the campaign.
All that women do is to sing and lay down their cloth for
politicians to walk on. I think it is time the women wrap their
cloths around themselves and rub shoulders with the men, she
added.
A lecturer at the Institute of Statistical Social and Economic Research
at the University of Ghana, Dzodzi Tsikata, said recently that a
womens manifesto would serve as an important point of reference
for womens issues.
Most of us are working from our corners be it in the
area of violence, inequality or health but there is no common
platform to address gender issues in a holistic manner, Tsikata
noted, adding that Together we should be able to make demands
on the politicians.
These demands would include having more attention paid to the economic
situation of women. We have lost control over the management
of our economies, says Tsikata. Years of structural
adjustment have left many women impoverished
Not even our men
have control when it come to economic issues. According to
the United Nations Human Development Report (HDR) for 2003, 44.8
percent of Ghanaians live below the poverty line of one dollar a
day.
According to Tsikata, the Ghana Poverty Reduction strategy paper
does not favour women while agricultural policies also leave
much to be desired.
Other matters that need to be addressed include maternal mortality,
and the fact that women appear more likely to be infected with the
AIDS virus than men. HDR statistics indicate that 20 per cent of
women are estimated to use condoms during high-risk sex, while 33
per of men do
so.
Apart from the physiological factors that make women more vulnerable
to HIV/AIDS, poverty has also denied them the right to negotiate
safer sex with the men they often depend on.
Furthermore, women are traditionally required to give birth to consolidate
their marriages; as such, they cannot have protected sex all the
time.
According to Kutin Mensah, unequal relations between men and women
also pose a particular challenge to women who vie for political
posts. Women may not find it easy to hold different political
views from (the heads of their) households. Their sexuality, their
marital status and whether or not they have children may be (used
to) discriminate against them, she says.
During times of political unrest, women candidates could also find
themselves being sexually abused.
Deputy Trade and Industry Minister Hajia Halima Mahama has also
come out in support of a womens manifesto for the 2004 polls
but she cautions that it must embrace the interests of both
rural and urban women.
While urban women may want equal representation on company boards,
rural women could be more concerned with access to clean water,
credit and education for their children.
Kutin Mensah says efforts were made during the era of Kwame Nkrumah,
Ghanas first post-independence leader, to ensure that women
played an active role in public decision making. But, she believes
that subsequent governments have done less to ensure womens
participation in politics. Certain analysts have also argued that
years of political instability in Ghana have made women reluctant
to try their hand at politics.
The political marginalisation of women is reflected in the small
numbers of female candidates who are elected to the legislature.
Our record of women in parliament has been dismal over the
years, says Tsikata. Over forty years after independence,
we still dont have an appreciable number of women in parliament.
Ghana currently lags behind countries like Uganda, South Africa
and Botswana where the number of women in parliament has
increased over the years. Latest statistics from the Swiss-based
Inter-Parliamentary Union indicate that women account for only nine
percent of the Ghanaian
legislature against 24.7 percent in Uganda, and 29.8 percent
in South Africa.
A senior lecturer at the School of Communication Studies at the
University of Ghana, Audrey Gadzekpo, has called on womens
rights activists to support women who enter politics.
If we want things to happen, we need to ensure that there
is equity and fairness in the political playing field we
need to give a high level of support to women candidates,
she said. Gadzekpo added that she was troubled by media coverage
of would-be contenders: It is not good for the media to focus
on trivial issues about female politicians such as their appearance
or dressing.
Women also face greater challenges when it comes to literacy. The
HDR estimates that 35.5 percent of women are illiterate as
opposed to 18.9 percent of men.
But, Tsikata believes this is not necessarily a problem. I
have met a lot of party chairman in rural Ghana who have no formal
education, but they are influential, they understand the issues.
But, the same cannot be said for women.
Nonetheless, she believes there should be a push for a variety of
Ghanaian languages to be used in the national assembly, as this
would give more women the confidence to participate in politics.
Theres a common saying in Ghana, that women are their
own enemies. Tsikata dismisses this with a pinch of salt,
describing it as an escape route for men who do not want to address
the issue of gender inequality. (END/2003)
Source: Isabella Gyau Orhin for IPS
From: http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/artikel.php?ID=45621
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