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Liberia elects Africa's
first woman President - what does this mean for women?
By Rochelle Jones
January 20, 2006 - (AWID: Resource Net Friday File) Peace, justice
and reconciliation after 14 years of war, stamping out corruption
and lawlessness and restoring decimated infrastructure and services
are some of the issues that Ms. Johnson-Sirleaf will be taking on
in her Presidency. No easy task for anyone, and yet Liberia's new
President has another hat to wear - Africa's first elected woman
head of state.
''QUEEN OF AFRICA'' (1)
Being elected to the ranks of an historically paternalistic terrain
of political administrations in Africa, should not be underestimated.
In a
recent interview she laughed when she recalled President John Kufuor
of Ghana remarking that he doesn't consider her a woman, and attributed
it to her determined presence in so-called ''male dominated'' fields
such as finance (2). In reality, for years Ms. Johnson-Sirleaf has
been passionately committed to human rights and a positive role
model for Liberian women, even before Charles Taylor's infamous
National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) staged an uprising against
the government in 1989 and began a civil war that lasted 14 years.
In 2002, for example, she co-authored Women, War and Peace: The
Independent Experts' Assessment on the Impact of Armed Conflict
on Women and Women's Role in Peace-building, a project of UNIFEM
(the United Nations Development Fund for Women); and has
served on the Boards of the International Crisis Group (ICG) and
the Nelson Mandela Foundation (3).
So for women in Africa, the election of their first female head
of state is a window of hope for the many other women holding administrative
positions, struggling for a policy and legal environment that does
not uphold or ignore cultural and social norms which subordinate
women. It is also a moment of triumph for those who are marginalised
under the rule of male-dominated systems of governance that allocate
little funding for programs that address the needs of women.
AN OPPORTUNITY FOR LIBERIAN WOMEN
For Liberia, it's one step at a time, with Johnson-Sirleaf's victory
marking the end of one struggle for women, but the beginning of
many more. Amrita Basu's study on the relationship between social
movements and party politics has found that one of the biggest challenges
in confronting gender inequalities through the party system is that
''parties draw on women's participation as individuals, not as members
of a group that has suffered discrimination.'' (4). Juxtaposing
this in the context of Liberia, even though Johnson-Sirleaf is now
President, she is still operating in a ''male-dominated'' arena,
and acting as an individual. In this regard, it will be vital for
women's groups in Liberia to mobilise on issues that affect them
and maintain open channels of communication between civil society
groups and the government.
Mobilisation should not be anything new for women in Liberia. During
the civil war, and despite the fact that women were beaten, mutilated,
raped and disempowered, women found ways and means to fight back
and organise. Stripped of their livelihoods, families and self-determination,
some women chose to join armed resistance struggles such as the
Movement for Democracy in Liberia (MODEL), so they could feed themselves
and their families with the provisions provided by the combatants
(5). Many young girls had no
choice. In 2004, Human Rights Watch published a report that described
how another armed faction - Liberians United for Reconciliation
and Democracy (LURD), ''abducted girls, trained them to use guns
and other weaponry, and sexually assaulted many to the point of
death''. Children formed over 70% of combatants in Liberia during
the war (5).
Others who were lucky to avoid combat, organised non-violently to
lead an initiative for international intervention:
''In 2000 the Mano River Union Women Peace Network (MARWOPNET) was
founded by women from Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, recognising
that there would be no peace in Liberia without peace in the region.
MARWOPNET put forth an initiative to mediate the conflict and disagreement
between Guinea and Liberia and dispatched a delegation to appeal
to the feuding heads of states in the region.'' (5)
One Liberian woman living in the US, for example, describes how
women were integral to the current ?fragile' peace that Liberia
now enjoys:
''They held prayer vigils, begged the combatants to lay down their
guns, and petitioned the heads of the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) to convene peace talks in Accra, Ghana in
July of 2003 - the talks that gave rise to the Comprehensive Peace
Agreement (CPA) which brought an end to our civil conflict.'' (6).
With the existence of a fragile peace in Liberia at present, and
with so many women and children left emotionally, physically and
psychologically scarred, similar kinds of solidarity and organisation
will be vital for women's rights and gender equality in Liberia's
future. Basu has argued that in Sri Lanka, which experienced a similar
protracted war with women combatants and peace advocates, what brought
women into the public sphere was the strong role of women's civil
society organisations, including separatist groups, human rights
and peace groups. Future government policies under Johnson-Sirleaf
will need to identify with different groups, as well as women as
a collective body, focusing on common needs such as counselling
and education (literacy for women in Liberia in 2003 was only
37% (5)), reproductive health and HIV/AIDS, and addressing all forms
of gender-based violence, which typically increases in the fragile,
interim period at the end of a war. One of the major issues facing
young women is the cost of education - and many are engaging in
sexual ?transactions' to pay for their schooling (6).
Johnson-Sirleaf has said that she would like to initiate a national
dialogue like a Truth and Reconciliation Commission regarding the
atrocities committed during the war, so the country could ''strike
a balance between forgiveness and demands for justice'' (7), but
it will be a difficult road ahead with her plans of engaging members
of the opposition in governance processes, so as to avoid eruptions
along old fault lines. UNIFEM has engaged with the Ministry of Gender
and Development in Liberia to ensure that legislation setting up
the Truth and Reconciliation Commission will investigate gender-based
crimes (5).Local women's groups in Liberia, such as the Women in
Peace building Network (WIPNET), the Mano River Union Women's Peace
Network (MARWOPNET), the National Women's Commission of Liberia
(NAWOCAL), the Association of Female Lawyers of Liberia (AFELL)
and the Liberian Female Law Enforcers Association (LIFLEA) to name
a few, continue their work in ''peace advocacy, micro-credit, skills
training, trauma healing, advocacy on sexual and gender-based violence,
legal advice and representation, leadership programs, and research
and activities relating to the reintegration of female ex-combatants''
(5). Johnson-Sirleaf's targeted engagement with local women's organisations,
however, will be key in the process of rebuilding women's lives
and forging new pathways of gender equality and women's rights in
Liberia.
Notes:
(1)Crowds were shouting ''Queen of Africa'' at Johnson-Sirleaf's
inauguration ceremony on January 16 ? see Polgreen, Lydia. 2006.
Africa's
first elected Head of State takes office. New York Times, January
16, 2006.
Available from:
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/16/international/africa/16cnd-liberia.html?pagewanted=print
(2)Hartill, Lane. 2005. Liberia's 'Iron Lady' Goes for Gold. Washington
Post: Wednesday, October 5, 2005.
Available from:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/04/AR2005100401564_pf.html
(3)From http://www.womenwagingpeace.net
(4)Basu, Amrita. 2005. Women, Political Parties and Social Movement
in South Asia ? Occasional Paper 5 in a series published by the
United Nations Research Institute for social Development (UNRISD).
Available from:
www.unrisd.org/publications/opgp5
(5)UNIFEM, 2005. Gender Profile of the conflict in Liberia.
Available from
www.womenwarpeace.org
(6)Doe-Anderson, Jestona. 2005. Overcoming Subordination: The struggle
of women in Liberia continues. The Perspective, January 18, 2005.
Available from: www.theperspective.org
(7)Interview with Spiegel, Dec 2005. Liberia's Desire for Peace.
Available from:
http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/0,1518,druck-391250,00.html
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From: http://www.awid.org/go.php?list=analysis&prefix=analysis&item=00298
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