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In Africa, women are vanguard
of progress
By: Laurie Goering
August 9, 2006 – (Chicago Tribune) Sweden
and Norway once claimed the world's highest percentage of female
lawmakers. Now that distinction belongs to an African nation: Rwanda.
Women in the tiny, land-locked country still recovering from a 1994
genocide hold 48 percent of the country's legislative seats. A woman
heads the Supreme Court and half of the country's judges are women,
as are half of its college graduates. That, little by little, is
bringing real change. Women and girls, who used to have no inheritance
rights, now inherit equally with men. Rape, once rarely prosecuted,
is commonly punished with sentences of up to 15 years in prison.
And if a girl drops out of school, social workers show up at the
family home to try to get her back in class.
"We are having a kind of revolution,"
said Sen. Odette Nyiramilimo, head of the Rwandan Senate's committee
on social affairs and human rights. "The way of thinking and
taking decisions is changing." Bucking tradition, women are
quietly and steadily assuming larger leadership roles across much
of Africa. Liberia has Africa's first elected woman president, Ellen
Johnson-Sirleaf, a former World Bank economist. Mozambique and Sao
Tome and Principe have women prime ministers and South Africa and
Zimbabwe have female vice presidents. Zambia has a woman running
for president, Tanzania has a female foreign minister and women
hold at least 30 percent of the legislative seats in Burundi, South
Africa and Mozambique.
For the most part, that hasn't yet stemmed the
most serious problems women face in Africa: poverty, AIDS, violence
and lack of access to schools, health care, credit and other vital
services. But Johnson-Sirleaf, Africa's highest-profile female leader,
predicts that the growing number of women in power in Africa will
in time bring real change. "Because they're mothers, there
will be stronger peace-building efforts," she told the Tribune
during a visit to Chicago after her inauguration early this year.
"There will be more attention on children and education"
and a move away from heavy spending on militaries and defense. In
Liberia, "women are still far behind in all aspects" of
life, she said. But a major reason she was elected in the war-fatigued
country, she said, is that "everyone concluded that men had
ruled the country for over 100 years and had failed."
Rwanda, which has made the greatest strides toward
increasing female leadership in Africa, got its start in the aftermath
of the 1994 genocide, which left 800,000 dead and the country with
a surviving population that was 70 percent female. Women, faced
with hungry children and dead or jailed husbands, began venturing
out of their homes to find work or start businesses. A new constitution
set aside 30 percent of the country's legislative seats for them,
and women began winning even unreserved seats. The country now has
a high enough percentage of women in office that it has been able
to push through controversial reforms. Previously, a woman caught
in an adulterous relationship automatically was divorced from her
husband and lost rights to her children and home, while a male adulterer
received no punishment. Today neither faces legal sanction and "it's
up to the couple to decide what to do," Nyiramilimo said.
Similarly, female dropout rates--once high in Rwanda--have
plunged after the country's female minister of education began sending
social workers to the homes of girls who quit school. The workers
try to find schools closer to home for girls who had to walk too
far, for instance, or impress on parents that educating girls is
as crucial as educating boys. The results are already evident in
national statistics. Before the genocide, primary school enrollment
was about 75 percent; today it is near 100 percent, Nyiramilimo
said. Fifty-five percent of primary school graduates go to high
school, up from 9 percent before the genocide. And women, who in
2000 made up 20 percent of university graduates, today account for
50 percent, according to government figures.
As more women are educated, family sizes also are
falling, a crucial change in densely populated Rwanda. Since the
1980s, the average number of children per family has fallen from
eight to six, and legislators hope to reduce the average to three
by 2020, mainly by improving the educational level of Rwandan women.
Interestingly, men, once deeply resistant to allowing women to open
businesses, join cooperatives or seek elected office, also are changing
their attitudes, the senator said. With 63 percent of Rwandans living
on less than $1 a day--the United Nations poverty line--men are
seeing that additional family income can be a big help. Today "women
who bring money home are more powerful and respected," Nyiramilimo
said. "And as women's status changes, so does that of their
children."
Women in Rwanda, as in much of Africa, still face
a disproportionate share of problems. Seventy-five percent of Rwanda's
poor are women, and domestic violence, though declining, remains
a major problem. As recently as 2002, Nyiramilimo herself couldn't
get a home loan without her husband's signature. Some of the country's
new female legislators stand accused of being "quota"
representatives lacking the knowledge or background to effectively
serve as leaders. "Not all women have enough capacity and skills,"
said Immaculate Ingabire, a women's activist in Kigali. "But
not all men are capable to be good leaders either, and they're not
challenged like women are."
Rwanda's successes have drawn the attention of
other African women, who hope to replicate the changes at home,
Nyiramilimo said. She said she thinks that some of the new laws
in Rwanda may prove key to finally quickening the pace of development
in Africa. "If women and children get more power, the continent
will develop," she predicted. "If all our children can
go to secondary school and read and write, things will be different."
From: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0608090182aug09,1,1523377.story?ctrack=1&cset=true
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