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A PRICE ABOVE RUBIES
By Rachel Rinaldo
February 18, 2004 (IPS News) We are going to shout
about bride price across Africa and we are going to say 'no' to
the sale of women, exclaimed Atuki Turner to a crowded hall
at Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda.
Turner was speaking at the opening this week of the first international
conference on the tradition of bride price.
The groundbreaking event was organised by Mifumi, a women's non-governmental
organisation (NGO) in rural eastern Uganda. It brought together
activists from Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal,
Rwanda and South Africa to discuss the effect that payment of bride
price has on women. Delegates also talked about ways of eliminating
this practice in Africa and elsewhere.
Bride price is one of the most widespread and entrenched cultural
institutions in Africa. It requires a man to give money and possibly
goods such as livestock and foodstuffs to his bride's family.
Although the tradition varies from place to place, women's rights
activists say that in most cases it contributes to gender inequality
and domestic violence. Turner, Mifumi's Executive Director, said
that in Uganda and various other countries there were no laws governing
bride price.
Many conference participants argued that the bride price has outlived
its original purpose, which was to be a token of appreciation that
cemented the bond between two families. Miria Matembe, a prominent
member of parliament in Uganda, said the tradition was now an excuse
to accumulate wealth - with a bride's family routinely demanding
large numbers of livestock, as well as cash and other presents.
The girl's parents look at her as a source of income and demand
too much from the groom's side. Once the groom has paid so much,
he starts looking at his wife as property, Matembe said. Bride
price perpetuates the low status of women and keeps them in bondage.
In some countries, such as Uganda, men demand a full refund of the
bride price if a marriage ends. This effectively prevents women
from leaving abusive marriages.
Domestic violence is a serious problem in Uganda, but still rarely
discussed in public.
Beatrice Apolot, from the eastern town of Tororo,
told the conference about her ordeal at the hands of her husband,
who battered her in 2000. I was bedridden, I could hardly
talk, I was helpless, she said.
Apolot is now an activist with Mifumi, where she assists other survivors
of domestic violence. She has found bride price to be the major
contributing factor to spousal abuse.
In December 2001, Mifumi conducted a referendum in Tororo Province
as part of a two-year campaign on the bride price. Sixty percent
of respondents voted that the price should become a non-refundable
gift.
In addition, men who have paid for their brides often expect complete
acquiescence when it comes to sex.
Noerine Kaleeba, founder of the AIDS Support Organisation - an NGO
that is leading the fight against HIV in Uganda - said families
were marrying off their daughters at increasingly younger ages as
a result of the pandemic.
However, young women in these marriages were unable to refuse sex
- or insist that their husbands wore condoms, something which made
them vulnerable to contracting HIV. You have been paid for,
so how are you able to negotiate in this relationship? asked
Kaleeba.
Despite a wealth of evidence about its injurious consequences, activists
face considerable challenges in their efforts to do away with the
bride price. Traditionalists in many countries see the practice
as an essential part of local cultures, which they are fighting
to preserve.
Ironically, many women also approve of the tradition. Matembe said
that women in rural areas of Uganda were often described as useless,
despite the work they performed in the household. They are
told it is only bride price that gives them value. Since many women
believe this, it is no wonder that even today, they don't support
the abolition of bride price, she added.
But this approval isn't only concentrated in the countryside. According
to Turner, educated women in urban areas also regard bride price
as a cherished custom. The high prices they can command at marriage
become sources of status - and because their families are wealthy,
there are few concerns about the price having to be refunded.
These factors notwithstanding, some educated women - including Matembe
- have pledged not to continue the tradition when their children
marry.
Wambui Otieno, a 67-year old women's rights activist, claimed to
be one of the first Kenyan women to reject the practice when she
was first married. I told my father, 'I am your daughter and
cannot be bought by anybody', the former Mau Mau fighter declared
to loud applause.
Mifumi and other activists are pushing for laws to reform the bride
price and to give women the ability to challenge discriminatory
practices in court. The law is crucial, said Evelyn
Okoth, a Mifumi staff member. Once we have that, we have to
spread the word: we have to make every single girl, woman, and child
aware of this law.
Such changes may soon be coming to Uganda. The Domestic Relations
Bill, a piece of legislation that seeks to reform several existing
laws on marriage and the family, would redefine bride price as an
optional marriage gift and prohibit refunds. The bill languished
for several years, but was introduced into parliament last December.
It may be passed sometime this year.
For many activists, however, new laws are just the starting point.
Said Matembe, Legislating against bride price will not be
a solution to discrimination.
The solution to all these cultural practices that undermine
the status of women is in the promotion of their status through
education and economic empowerment.
The three-day conference on the bride price ends Wednesday, Feb.
18.
(END/2004)
Featured in
Pambazuka E-News letter Issue #144
From: http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/interna.asp?idnews=22462
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