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RESOLUTION 1325
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Women Should Fight for Their
Rights
October 19, 2004 - (New Era - Windhoek)
- A city Councillor has appealed to women to stand up for their
political and economic rights and to get involved in developmental
activities in their respective communities.
At the opening of the Tobias Hainyeko Consti-tuency office over
the week-end, Ellaine Trepper, the Deputy Mayor of the City of Windhoek,
said development could not be achieved if women were left behind.
She said she wanted to see more women play a visible role in bringing
about de-velop-ment, adding that the constituency office was built
to benefit both sexes.
She further called on men to stop calling women "house--wives"
saying that the usage of such term or words under-mined the status
of women.
Trepper stressed that wo-men were not married to houses to be called
house-wives, but were married to their husbands and thus they should
be called men's wives.
"The word 'housewife' should disappear from our midst because
it is an insult to us women to be called house-wives," she
argued.
She said women have done a lot for both men and their fellow women
as they partici-pated in the war of liberation. They also actively
partici-pated in the reconstruction of the country over the past
14 years of independence.
She said women should stand up and actively take part in politics
and must campaign hard so that 30 per cent of women parliamentary
representation is secured.
In her address, the Deputy Chairperson of the National Council,
Margaret Mensah-Williams, said Namibia adopted the decentralisation
process with the overall aim of ensuring economic, cul-tural and
social development. Through this policy, the people at the grass-roots
level could be accorded the oppor-tunity to take part in decision-making
and extend democ-racy as a right based on national ideals and values.
Mensah-Williams noted that the decentralisation
policy was defined in simple terms of bringing the Govern-ment closer
to the people, and the constituency office was one of the developmental
milestones.
She said decentralisation has two phases,
of delegation and devolution within the framework of a unitary state.
According to Williams, this implies that the Central Government
would retain the responsibility to develop policies and legislation
while the implementation thereof is to be phased in systematically
through regional council offices.
The office would be used as community property where they could
convene their meeting and events including church services and other
community affairs.
She added that the key objectives concerning decen-tra-lisation
were to extend, enhance and guarantee par-tici-patory democracy
in order to achieve development.
The Tobias Hainyeko Con-stituency caters for both formal and informal
settlers and has many developmental facilities such as schools,
churches, clinics and commu-nity centres and police stations.
The constituency formerly known as Hakahana was recently renamed
because "the name Hakahana was the name of the colonial regime
when they removed black workers from the hostel to the informal
settlement called Hakahana", she said.
The constituency is now divided into
the Tobias Hainyeko and Moses Garoeb constituencies. More than 60
000 inhabitants live in these two settlements.
From:http://allafrica.com/stories/200410190195.html
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