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WOMEN BREAK INTO AFRICAN
POLITICS
By Gumisai Mutume
May 10, 2004
(afrol News) Women in Rwanda now top the world rankings of women
in national parliaments, with 49 percent of representation compared
to a world average of 15.1 percent. This success mirrors the trend
of a small, but growing number of sub-Saharan countries, where women
are breaking into politics.
Rwanda nevertheless
is special. This year the country commemorates the genocide of 1994,
when Rwandan women suffered death, humiliation, persecution and
sexual abuse during a 100-day massacre that left more than 800,000
people dead.
As the country undergoes a period of reconstruction, women are taking
an active role. They not only head about a third of all households,
but have also taken up many jobs that were formerly the preserve
of men, as in construction and mechanics.
However, their
most notable achievement has been in politics. Thanks to a new constitution,
24 out of 80 seats in the lower house of parliament are reserved
for women. During the country's September 2003 general election,
the first after the genocide, an additional 15 women were voted
into non-reserved seats, bringing 39 into the lower house. In the
upper house, 6 out of 20 seats are reserved for women.
To attain this,
Rwandan women lobbied heavily, helped to draft the new constitution
and developed voting guidelines that guaranteed seats for women
candidates. They were also able to push for the creation of a government
ministry of women's affairs to promote policies in favour of women's
interests.
- Especially in
post-conflict situations, where new constitutions and legislative
structures are being created, it is critical that women are present
at the peace table and in post-war policy-making, says UN Development
Fund for Women (UNIFEM) Executive Director Noeleen Heyzer. The agency
participated in post-genocide reconstruction in Rwanda, helping
women to prepare for political office.
- It will be interesting
to see what the entry of so many women in the national assembly
will do for politics in Rwanda, says the Inter-Parliamentary Union
(IPU), a Geneva-based organisation representing 138 parliaments
worldwide. IPU President Anders Johnsson observes that the European
Nordic countries have an established history of women's participation
in decision-making, but that Rwanda now overtakes the long-time
leader, Sweden, where women constitute 45 percent of parliamentarians.
Women in politics
The drive to promote women in decision-making positions worldwide
gained momentum during the 1980s and early 1990s through a series
of international conferences. Further impetus came from the Fourth
World Conference on Women, held in Beijing, China, in 1995, which
called for at least 30 per cent representation by women in national
governments. In September 2000 at the UN Millennium Summit in New
York, world leaders pledged to "promote gender equality and
the empowerment of women as effective ways to combat poverty, hunger
and disease and to stimulate development that is truly sustainable."
At that meeting,
world leaders adopted the goal of gender equality and seven others,
known collectively as the Millennium Development Goals. Since then,
the number of women in leadership positions has been rising.
- Study after
study has shown that there is no effective development strategy
in which women do not play a central role, says UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan. When women are fully involved, he notes, the benefits
are immediate - families are healthier and better fed and their
income, savings and investments go up. "And what is true of
families is also true of communities and, in the long run, of whole
countries."
Rwanda's success
in bringing women to the political table mirrors that of a small,
but growing number of countries in sub-Saharan Africa. In South
Africa and Mozambique, for example, women hold 30 per cent of the
seats in parliament - matching the international target.
Women's representation
in national parliaments across sub-Saharan Africa equals the world
average of about 15 per cent.
Despite being
one of the poorest regions in the world, the level of women's representation
in parliament in sub-Saharan Africa is higher than in many wealthier
countries, observes UNIFEM in its Progress of the World's Women
2002 report. In the US, France and Japan for instance, women hold
slightly more than 10 per cent of parliamentary seats.
Quota systems
Between 2000 and 2002, elections were held in 23 countries in sub-Saharan
Africa, with increases in women parliamentarians in 14 of them.
Most of the countries that have achieved significant increases in
women's participation have done so through the use of quotas - a
form of affirmative action in favour of women. Worldwide, about
30 of the world's more than 190 countries apply some form of female
quotas in politics.
In Uganda, says
Beatrice Kiraso, who was elected to parliament in 1996, quotas kick-started
the process of improving women's participation in national politics.
A cycle began in which "women gained confidence in women, opening
up even more avenues," she adds. Uganda's quota system evolved
from the current government's origins in a guerrilla war during
the 1980s, when women fought alongside men in the National Resistance
Army (NRA).
In each of the
zones the rebels won, local councils were set up, with each including
a secretary for women's affairs.
Eventually when
the NRA came to power in 1986, it introduced the system into national
politics. By 1994, the government of President Yoweri Museveni appointed
Dr Wandira Kazibwe as Vice President, making her one of the highest
ranking women in politics on the continent.
In South Africa
too, women played a key role in the national liberation struggle
and today are benefiting from a quota system adopted by the ruling
African National Congress (ANC).
In Africa, there
are three main quota systems:
» Constitutional quotas: Some countries, including Burkina
Faso and Uganda, have constitutional provisions reserving seats
in national parliament for women.
» Election law quotas: Provisions are written into national
legislation, as in Sudan.
» Political party quotas: Parties adopt internal rules to
include a certain percentage of women as candidates for office.
This is the case with the governing parties in South Africa and
Mozambique.
Lack of support
However, while introducing quotas provides a means of addressing
the gender imbalance in decision-making, the practice often lacks
support from important political actors or meets opposition in societies
that have strong patriarchal traditions.
Much like the
debate around affirmative action, those opposed to quota systems
say they discriminate against men.
The Zambia National
Women's Lobby Group accuses its government of lacking political
will. While the Zambian government has ratified a number of international
instruments to promote women in politics, the group reports, none
"have been domesticated."
Cultural and traditional
practices subjecting women to male dominance have also hindered
women's progress in achieving gender equality in politics. Women
face barriers such as "conflict, intimidation, negative attitudes,
stereotypes by society and lack of support from the electorate,"
notes the Zambian group.
The Stockholm-based
Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA) reports
that women politicians across the globe confront a "masculine
model" of politics. In many cases they lack political party
support and have no access to quality education and training to
enter politics.
- Political life
is organised for male norms and values and in many cases even for
male life-styles, notes Margaret Dongo, a Zimbabwean politician.
"But this must and will change," she adds. Zimbabwe is
one of four countries in sub-Saharan Africa where the proportion
of female parliamentarians declined during elections in 2000-02.
Legislated quotas
are "hopelessly wrong," Chief Whip Douglas Gibson of the
opposition Democratic Alliance in South Africa told the women's
advocacy group Gender Links. "Would you then say that 10 percent
of the cricket team should be white and the rest black because that
is the make up of the nation? You would not, because not everyone
wants to play cricket."
Unlike the ruling
ANC, the Democratic Alliance does not reserve seats for women.
More needs
to be done
Simply increasing women's share of seats in parliament alone is
not a solution, notes the UNIFEM report. It does not guarantee that
they will make decisions that benefit the majority of women. "It
can only level the playing field on which women battle for equality,"
reports the UN agency.
Many factors hinder
elected women from promoting laws that aid women. These may include
limits on policy choices parliamentarians can make due to the loan
conditions set by international financial institutions. They may
also be restrained by "national constitutions that hamper parliamentary
power in relation to the executive powers of governmentand by political
parties that exert strong discipline over their members," notes
UNIFEM.
Some gender activists
also argue that quotas may constitute a "glass ceiling"
beyond which women cannot go unless they engage in additional struggle.
Others contend that women who come into power under such a system
may be undervalued or viewed as not politically deserving. Quotas
"can only be a transitory solution not a cure for the makings
of a true democracy," says Mata Sy Diallo, former female Vice
President of the Senegalese National Assembly.
The IDEA institute
in Stockholm argues women politicians around the world are at a
disadvantage in terms of financial resources, since women are a
majority of the world's poor and in many patriarchal societies cannot
own property and do not have money of their own. Despite such hindrances,
a recent IDEA study recommends that women around the world learn
the rules of politics, create conditions that allow more women to
participate and then eventually change the rules to suit the needs
of the majority of women.
According to Birgitta
Dahl, a Swedish parliamentarian, "Political parties, the educational
system, non-governmental organisations, trade unions, churches -
all must take responsibility within their own organisation to systematically
promote women's participation, from the bottom up."
South Africa's
Speaker of Parliament Frene Ginwala insists that the main responsibility
falls on women themselves. "In any society and situation it
is those most affected who must bring about change," she says.
"Those who are privileged benefit from a system that marginalises
others. It is up to us, the women."
From: http://www.afrol.com/articles/12204
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