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Women are Africa's political
hope
Liberia is not the only female success story on this war-scarred
continent - women's power there is growing
BY Emira Woods and Lisa Veneklasen
March 15, 2006 -(Newsday) Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf
will address a joint session of the U.S. Congress today. This
historic honor, bestowed sparingly on international dignitaries,
is a fitting tribute for Africa's first democratically elected
female president. But Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf is not an anomaly.
The African political landscape is being reshaped by women, generating
hope for the future of the continent and raising the bar for democracy
worldwide.
Few Americans would guess that the country that leads the world
in political gender balance is Rwanda, where women make up half
of the members of parliament, a development that started in the
mid-1990s. South Africa and Mozambique, also high on the list,
are both countries with women composing more than 30 percent of
their parliaments. This stands in stark contrast to the United
States, where women make up only 15 percent of Congress.
African countries also have higher percentages of women in cabinet-level
positions. In South Africa, 13 out of 28 are women, and in Rwanda
there are nine women to 22 men. In the United States, there are
only three women in President George W. Bush's 20-person cabinet.
One big factor in the rise of women's political power in Africa
is affirmative action. Governments have set concrete targets for
women's participation in political bodies. The newly formed Pan
African Parliament has also implemented affirmative-action measures
to ensure a minimum of 30 percent representation by women, all
of whom have been elected to office in their countries.
But African women's rising power is measured not just in numbers.
In Liberia, the same women who bore the brunt of the country's
more than two decades of war are the ones leading the struggle
for peace and carving out a new economic and political path.
It was the Liberian women who crossed class, ethnic and political
lines to organize and sustain marches for peace and change over
the past two years. Market sellers, students, farmers, professionals
- women from all walks of life - marched daily in drenching rain
and searing sun, often with their children on their backs, to
demand the exit of their former leader, war criminal Charles Taylor,
indicted by a special court in Sierra Leone, and to insist on
an end to civil strife. Their efforts ushered in a period of peace
that has now lasted more than 2 1/2 years and opened the door
to democracy.
After the election last November, when supporters of presidential
candidate George Weah disputed the results and marched in the
streets - again raising the specter of instability - it was women
and leading religious leaders who engaged them in a dialogue and
insisted on reconciliation and peace.
Of course, the real test for Africa's emerging female leaders
is yet to come. Will they be able to translate leadership positions
into a fresh agenda for peace, sustainable development and democracy
in the region?
In the case of Liberia, the challenges are daunting. A fresh agenda
would mean mending the social fabric torn apart by 25 years of
crisis and chaos in which 250,000 people were killed. A Harvard-educated
economist, Johnson-Sirleaf, who was sworn into office in January,
should manage well a truth-and-reconciliation process that brings
healing to a wounded society and holds key people responsible.
A fresh agenda would also transform an economy that has relied
on illicit activity for 14 years - trade in diamonds used to finance
wars; stolen timber; "raped rubber"; and the flow of
illegal arms - into an economy that brings productive activity
for the now 85 percent unemployed.
The critical role of women in that society must be recognized
by giving them equal inheritance and land rights to allow them
to fully and wisely use resources for their families and communities.
The U.S. Congress and the Bush administration should help give
Liberia a chance at a fresh start by agreeing to cancel the country's
external debts, accumulated under past dictatorships. Those debts,
the equivalent of about 680 percent of the country's gross domestic
product, undermine the capacity of the new government to tackle
the problems of rising HIV/AIDS infection rates and a lack of
functioning schools, electricity and other infrastructure. Thirty
percent of that debt is owed to the United States, which should
not only forgive its share but also encourage other nations to
forgive theirs.
The U.S. government should also use its leverage to ensure that
U.S. corporations operating in the country act responsibly, paying
proper fees, taxes and wages, respecting labor rights and protecting
the environment. For example, Bridgestone/Firestone Inc. is now
taking advantage of deals made with a former caretaker Liberian
government as well as the desperation of many poor Liberians to
profit from operations that employ child labor, destroy the environment
and violate other international standards.
There is much at stake for Liberia and the rest of Africa. But
it's also a time to celebrate and support the region's newly emerging
female leaders with a fresh agenda.
Emira Woods, originally from Liberia, is co-director of Foreign Policy
In Focus at the Institute for Policy Studies, based in Washington,
D.C. Lisa VeneKlasen is director of Just
From: http://www.newsday.com/news/opinion/ny-opwoo154662444mar15,0,1080723.story?coll=ny-viewpoints-headlines
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