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UGANDA: Uneven Progress
on Gender Equality
By Fawzia Sheikh
September 3, 2005 - (IPS) Uganda has been
widely praised for having a constitution that reflects gender concerns.
The 10-year-old document commits the country to affirmative action
in the workplace, freedom from sexual discrimination and economic
rights for women.
It also allows for a commission to monitor
whether government programmes discriminate on the basis of sex.
In addition, Uganda has pledged to implement the United Nations’
eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which include the promotion
of gender equality by 2015.
Nonetheless, progress towards real women’s
empowerment has been somewhat erratic in the East African country.
Women are visible in political office, holding
almost a quarter of parliamentary seats. However, their representation
and participation in business and social institutions such as hospitals
and schools is far less, according to member of parliament (MP)
Betty Amongi.
"The president has been using women to
get political support," she claims.
Government has established a Ministry of Gender
-- but given it substantially less money than other departments.
Mary Amajo, another MP and chairperson of the Uganda Women’s
Parliamentary Association, says the ministry lacks financing for
the local women’s councils under its authority, which are
supposed to assess women's needs.
"I wouldn't call it totally lip service,"
notes Amajo of government efforts to bring about equality between
men and women. "I would say it is slow because we're still
a male-dominated society. When we start debating anything to do
with gender, that's when male MPs walk out to do other things."
Women have trouble gaining access to financial
resources and land, Amajo told IPS. Although they can buy land,
family property is still inherited by men. As a result, women often
lack the collateral to secure loans from big banks that offer low
interest rates -- and must turn to loan sharks.
Uganda also has no specific laws governing
domestic violence, which currently falls under aggravated assault
in the penal code. Women need access to legal aid, safe shelters,
counselling and financial resources to sustain themselves if their
spouses are imprisoned.
Patterns of gender inequality begin at school
level.
According to Amongi, government funding for
schools does not cover all of their expenses -- forcing schools
to charge fees. However, parents in rural areas who cannot afford
to educate all their children typically give preference to boys.
This stems from the cultural belief that "girls
are supposed to be prepared for marriage, not school," Amongi
explains. She says some parents encourage daughters to marry at
a very early age -- even as young as ten years.
The primary education system throughout the
country is further burdened by a lack of feeding programmes, overcrowded
classes and schools that sometimes lack separate toilets for boys
and girls. This makes life awkward for menstruating girls whose
plight is aggravated by the fact they may not be able to afford
sanitary towels.
"Oftentimes a girl gets her dress soiled
and the boys laugh. The girls laugh sometimes too," says Amajo.
"In a month she misses four days on average, so some of them
give up."
In addition, young girls may fall prey to
sexual advances by teachers and other male authority figures --
which could bring their education to a halt: "When girls get
pregnant, they drop out of school," observes Amongi.
The second MDG speaks of the need to achieve universal primary education,
while the third goal focuses on eliminating gender disparities in
primary and secondary school.
Female genital mutilation (FGM) is another
problematic issue facing young women.
Dora Byamukama, an MP and chair of the government’s
Equal Opportunities Committee, believes Uganda needs more legislation
outlawing the practice. FGM is dealt with by laws about torture,
which makes it difficult to apprehend those who carry out the practice.
Problems relating to gender are worse in war-torn
northern Uganda, where girls battle sexual abuse and poverty on
a scale not experienced by their counterparts in other regions,
says Amajo.
Since 1986, government has been fighting the
rebel Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) in the north of the country.
Led by Joseph Kony, the LRA claims that it wants to replace the
administration with one based on the Biblical Ten Commandments.
However, the group has become better known
for its abduction of children to serve as rebel soldiers and sex
slaves (END/2005)
From: http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=30129
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