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RESOLUTION 1325
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SOUTH AFRICA: Women's Day - balancing
gains and fears
August 7, 2006 (IRIN) - South Africa celebrates Women's Day on
Wednesday, marking 50 years since a historic march by 20,000 women
against apartheid laws, but the remarkable progress made in gender
equality has failed to extinguish a resilient culture of violence
and abuse against women.
In a country where racial and sexual equality are enshrined in
the constitution, and women occupy premier positions in both government
and business, a female chief executive will probably be too scared
to walk alone in the evening.
"We shouldn't underestimate the tremendous gains that have
been made in terms of formal equality since 1956, but these gains
have yet to translate into improved living conditions for all
women," said Carrie Shelver, spokesperson for People Opposing
Women Abuse (POWA), a group dedicated to ending violence against
women and supporting survivors.
"There remains a tragically high level of violence and rape
against women in this country and it shouldn't be forgotten, especially
when we are marking Women's Day and celebrating women's achievements,"
she added.
On 9 August 1956, thousands of women of all races from across
South Africa staged a boisterous challenge to the apartheid government,
marching to the Union Buildings in Pretoria, the capital, to demand
an end to laws that violated their individual rights and liberties.
Fifty years later, women make up a third of the country's parliamentarians
and 43 percent of President Thabo Mbeki's cabinet, holding key
government posts such as foreign affairs and minerals and mining;
Deputy President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka could one day become the
first woman to lead South Africa.
Women also head major corporations, but gains in the corporate
world have been less dramatic than those in the political arena,
and harder to maintain: a 2004 study revealed that only 7 percent
of senior managers in South Africa were female.
"The number shocked many people and it quickly climbed to
19.8 percent - a level better than that in Canada, Australia or
the United States - but it has since slipped back to only 16.8
percent," said Tina Thomson, CEO of the Businesswomen's Association
(BWA) of South Africa. "The problem is that support systems
for women do not yet exist, either in businesses or in the home.
Women are as competent and qualified as men, but they still lack
resilience to hold on to their position."
Belying this shining façade of equality and constitutional
commitment to human rights is the scar of violence that makes
the country one of the world's most dangerous. South Africa sadly
boasts one of the highest rates of rape in the world and its medical
infrastructure is struggling to cope with soaring levels of HIV/AIDS.
A culture of violence born of years of political struggle against
apartheid may perhaps explain the high levels of cruelty towards
women, but women's groups also point a finger at patriarchal tradition.
"We've fallen into the trap of formal equality, of saying
we have women business and political leaders, but too many women
still go home to oppression," said Shelver. "We need
to change the mindset in the country; we need to transform institutions
- it's not only about writing new laws and thinking that's enough."
The endemic culture of violence could be one reason women fail
to reach and maintain top positions in the business world. "A
group of women CEOs were asked what keeps them awake at night,
and every single one said it wasn't a workplace issue, but a security
issue," Thomson said.
"They were worried about getting home safely; they were worried
about feeling safe in their home and about their children's safety
- imagine how much more productive they could be if they didn't
have to worry so much about personal security."
Changing South Africa's culture may prove more difficult than
amending its constitution. Former Deputy President Jacob Zuma
outraged opponents and women's groups with his remarks when he
recently stood trial for allegedly raping a 31-year-old family
friend.
Zuma was acquitted after he admitted to having consensual sex
with the woman, even though he knew she was HIV-positive. He invoked
"Zulu culture" to explain why he had slept with her,
angering anti-AIDS campaigners, who said such a high-ranking politician
should be a better role model in a country wracked by AIDS.
Organisers of the Women's Day celebrations said true equality
and respect for women was still elusive, but the event would help
keep the issue on the political agenda.
"This is a call to all South African women to march with
us during this 'Age of Hope' and attend to the unfinished and
complex task of ensuring true equality, development and peace,"
the ANC Women's League said in a statement. "We must continue
to pay attention to the acts of violation against women, children,
people with disabilities and the elderly."
From: http://www.alertnet.org
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