Activists Fight Against Female
Circumcision. [Burkina
Faso] Activists in Burkina Faso are marking the 16th
anniversary of their campaign to end the practice of female genital mutilation. Though
progress has been made, many young girls still undergo the dangerous operation, which is
banned by law. A rap song by the Burkinabe group Sofa tells the story of a young girl who
has undergone the practice of female genital mutilation. She suffers. She cries, the song
says. It hurts when she makes love. Activists and health officials gathered Monday in the
town of Yako for Burkina Faso's national day against female
genital mutilation (FGM).The
practice involves the cutting away of young girls external genitalia. Risks include
bleeding to death, infection, stunted growth, and complications during childbirth. In
1996, Burkina Faso passed
a law banning female genital mutilation. An anonymous hot line
was set up to report incidents and hundreds of practitioners have been successfully
prosecuted. Burkina Faso's
first lady, Chantal Compaore, says much progress against FGM
has been made in her country. We have arrived at a stage where we can actually carry out
surgery to repair some of the harmful effects of the FGM, she says. This is something we
must encourage. |
UNIFEM to Join African
Union Committee of Inquiry on Allegations of Sexual Misconduct by Forces. [Darfir] The
United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) will participate in the African Union's
(AU) newly established Committee of Inquiry, following recent reports in the news media of
alleged sexual violence, including rape and child abuse, by AU forces in Darfur.
Ambassador Baba Gana Kingibe, Head of the AU Mission in Sudan and Special Representative
of the Chairperson of the AU Commission, said that setting up the Committee was an
immediate response to the news reports, which first aired in a British Television Channel
Four documentary. According to Kingibe, the Committee will examine the contents of the
documentary and establish its veracity or otherwise, identify those responsible for the
violations and make recommendations on appropriate sanctions, in conformity with the
Protocol to the African Charter on Human and People's Rights on the Rights of Women, which
came into force in 2005. The Committee of Inquiry is headed by Winnie Byanyima, Director
for Women, Gender and Development of the AU Commission, the secretariat and executive body
of the 53 African member state grouping. h |
Obstruction,
Violence Worsening Crisis. [Darfur] Obstruction by
the Sudanese government and
increased violence from both rebels and Khartoum forces are
worsening the humanitarian
situation in the western region of Darfur, the U.N's Jan Egeland
said on Friday. Access
for aid workers in Darfur is at its worst level for
two years, the United Nations' top
humanitarian official said in an article sent to media organisations on Friday. "I
first spoke to the U.N. Security Council on Darfur two years ago,
calling it ethnic
cleansing of the worst kind. Today, I could simply hit the rewind button on much of that
earlier briefing," he wrote. Egeland's comments came as Khartoum and the main Darfur
rebel faction accepted a peace agreement to try to put an end to three years of fighting
in Sudan's vast west.
But two other rebel factions rejected the deal, casting doubt on
whether it would end the bloodshed. Egeland said aid workers in the remote region have
made huge strides since 2004, reducing death rates by two-thirds among Darfur's 2 million
displaced. "Today, however, these lifesaving achievements are being swept away by
increased violence by all sides, and increased obstructionism by the government
of Sudan,"
Egeland said. In northern and western Darfur, aid
workers could reach only 40 percent of
civilians in need of help due to mounting insecurity, he said, adding that better access
hinged on cooperation with the Sudanese government and rebels. "Unfortunately, we
have encountered only the opposite," he said. Last month Khartoum blocked Egeland
from visiting Darfur, which he says was to
stop him seeing the conditions for himself.
U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour was allowed to visit
Darfur this
week. She described the situation as "poor, bad and very alarming" and said
sexual violence against women was on the rise. |
Female U-20 Survives
Nigeria
Onslaught. [Liberia] The
Liberia National Female U-20 on Saturday survived the
onslaught of their more illustrious Nigerian counterpart when they snatched
draw from the Nigeria's
anticipated victory. The intriguing battle, which was played at a packed Antoinette Tubman
Stadium (ATS), was the first leg of the third and final round of the FIFA Women qualifiers
to see who books one of the two African tickets to the U-20 Women World Cup
in Russia in
August 2006. Liberia's
Decontee Syon's own goal after 67 minutes sent the visitors in a
buoyant mood. But Christina Myers soon silenced them when she turned the sorrow of many
Liberians in to joy; thanks to a terrific volley against the run of play two minutes
later. But due credit for host's draw must go to their eccentric goalie Mamie Karmara, who
stood between the Nigerians and total disgrace. The promising goalie made more than twelve
nerve wrecking saves to deny the adventurous Nigerians, in a virtually one sided contest
the visitors enjoyed a lion share of possession with most part of the game being played in
the half of the female Lone Star. |
Sheriff Identifies With U-20 Female
Team. [Liberia]
"While it is true I
am out of the Liberia Football Association
(LFA), my back will never be turned away from moves toward the development of the game in
the country. It is in this vane that I am here today to identify with you in your stride
to making our country pride." These were the words of former LFA Vice President for
Administration Siaka Sheriff. Mr. Sheriff made the statement on Saturday May 6, at the
team camp at Teachers Launch on the Kakata
Highway where
he presented several foods items
and L$25,000 to the team ahead of the second leg match with their Nigerian counterpart
in Nigeria.
In a brief statement Mr. Sheriff said he was there to identify with the team and motivate
players who are seen as the country's flag bearers in their crucial second leg match with
their Nigerian counterpart. He also said this U-20 National female team is just the
beginning of building a strong female teams in the country, adding that the team's first
leg against the well composed Nigerian side was a clear indication that our girls have the
talent but only need to be supported if we are to be on par with our colleagues on the
continent. The former LFA official further said this is the time that all Liberians should
rally around the President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf led government and Liberia Football
Association (LFA) in putting out blue prints to move sports forward in the country. |
What
Hope for Female Politicians?
[Nigeria] Indeed,
this is a crucial topic but I stumbled
into some women who opened up to me. When a person decides to vie for an elective office
what readily comes to mind are his capabilities. Can he perform when elected? What are his
programme of action? Does he have the necessary support and backing? What are his campaign
strategies to sell himself and his programme in other to be able to convince the
electorate to give him their mandate. All these issues are the norms in politics
everywhere in the world. But the question is, are these the issues in our country today?
Hardly think so. What one seems to think about is the big role money is playing in
politics. According to retired female politician who prefers to be anonymous, the bigger
your purse, the larger the votes. Women expectedly have not fared very well electorally.
There are no women governors and there are just few pockets of women here and there.
Considering the role money is playing in politics and the country will soon clock 46 years
we cannot but ask what hope for the
Nigeria
women both now and the future. |
It
is Not Possible to Have Female President. [Nigeria] I dont believe we are ripe
for woman president. I dont want to sound like a chauvinist, but I must tell you
that what happened in Liberia is not
likely to happen in Nigeria
in the nearest future
because Nigerian men are egocentric, self-centred and sometimes, we are African people to
the core. We are talking of African culture whereby the husband is regarded as head of the
house. Even in a situation where the woman is economically empowered, she still remains
subservient to the husband. Even if she has all the money in the world, she remains
subservient to the husband. To that extent, I dont think Nigerian men will allow
such a situation to happen in the country. |
Mbeki
Wants Next President to be a Woman.
[South Africa]
President Thabo Mbeki weighed
in on Friday in the succession debate raging in
South Africa,
saying he wants the next
president to be a woman. "As far as I am concerned, the
next president of South
Africa should be a woman," Mbeki told a gathering in Phuthaditjhaba in the
south-eastern Free State. "I can
report to you here that
there is not a single man in
the government, including the president, who works harder and better than the women who
are serving in government," he said in remarks broadcast on SABC radio. Mbeki named
Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka as the first woman deputy president in June after he fired Jacob
Zuma from the post in a major corruption scandal. While Zuma retains his title of deputy
president of the governing African National Congress, his political career could hit a
dead-end on Monday when a judge is to render a verdict on a charge that he raped a young,
HIV-positive woman. Mbeki, who took over the presidency from Nelson Mandela in 1999,
recently said he would not seek a third term in office, dispelling speculation that he
would try to hold on to power after his mandate ends in 2009. |
Bodies
of Three Women Found in Mamelodi. [South Africa] Bodies of three women were found
dumped behind a shopping complex in Mamelodi, east of Pretoria on Monday, police reported.
Spokesperson Brenda Kgafela said all three were possibly raped before being killed and
dumped there as they had only tops on. They were estimated to be between 17 and 20.
"One of the women had her hands and legs tied behind her back and the others had only
their hands tied," said Kgafela. She said the bodies were found at 8.30am behind the
Phela-ke-phele shopping complex at C5 Block L, by passers-by, who alerted the police. The
bodies were apparently dumped there during the night as they have not decomposed, said
Kgafela. A white substance was coming out of the mouth of one of the women. |
The 'She Asked For It'
Defense Wins. [South
Africa] The judge in the rape case ruled that the sex was
consensual between Zuma, who is 64, and the 31-year-old daughter of one of his former
comrades. But during the trial he admitted to behavior so irresponsible that his future
political activity deserves to be limited to voting. Where do we begin? Zuma said that his
accuser indicated that she wanted sex by the way she sat while wearing a knee-length skirt
- an idea he repeated Tuesday - and that it was his duty as a man to accommodate her. He
said he had not used a condom to have sex with the woman even though he knew she was
HIV-positive because he thought the risk of catching the AIDS virus was low. He said he
had chosen instead to shower after sex to minimize the risk of infection. Mind you, this
is the man who once led the country's National AIDS Council. Unfortunately, Zuma's views
and conduct are not rare in South Africa. Health officials say a sense of male entitlement
to sex is a major contributor to the country's high rape rates. The first sexual
experience is coerced for one in four women. Rape often occurs within families, and there
is tremendous family pressure on girls not to report it. In addition, students report that
many teachers demand sex for good grades. Male sexual attitudes also fuel
South Africa's
AIDS epidemic. Zuma's shower comment, which he justified Tuesday, lighted up the phone
banks at AIDS hot lines with callers hopeful that post-coital showering could prevent HIV
infections. |
SACP Attacks
Mbeki Over Female Successor Issue. [South Africa] In a direct attack on President
Thabo Mbeki, the South African Communist Party (SACP) says it is premature to discuss a
female successor, as it could be seen as attempt to an exclude other possible candidates.
"The atmosphere is poison, no matter how genuine the call about a woman as president.
It's interpreted in a particular way that you are trying to block a particular candidate.
The question relating to the deputy president has caused stress in the organization,
says Blade Nzimande, the SACP general secretary. The SACP criticised the presidency,
saying it is too powerful and centralised, emasculating Parliament. |
'Carpet Grades'
Are Target of Bias Policy. [Uganda] The
miniskirts worn by undergraduates at Makerere University
have been blamed for everything from AIDS to the disintegration of the African family.
That's one reason why eyebrows were raised when a handful of activists suggested that
young female college students were more often victims, thanks to their sexuality, than the
other way around.The practice of male lecturers at Makerere demanding sex from female
students in exchange for diplomas and "carpet" grades--indicating where the
transaction takes place--is well known. But recently, some administrators and women's
advocates at the university quietly drafted a sexual harassment policy to address the
problem. If it is approved--which could happen as soon as May--it would be among the first
of its kind in an African institution of higher learning. Karuhanga attributes the problem
to Uganda's
deeply patriarchal culture, which still teaches that men are superior and
allowed to demand what they want. In the tradition of the Baganda,
Uganda's largest tribe,
young girls learn about sex from sengas, or aunts. Today, professional sengas go door to
door in the dormitories at Makerere, selling advice, love potions and charms. They also
teach that a proper wife is submissive to her husband. Tradition discourages women from
speaking out against ill treatment by men. |
Women
Arrested for Defending Poor Children. [Zimbabwe] Police yesterday arrested four women
for protesting against schools who are turning away children for failing to pay school
fees.The women have been holding protests at schools demanding that headmasters allow poor
children to continue with their studies. A spokesperson of the Women of Zimbabwe Arise
confirmed the arrests of their members. Initial reports indicated three but
confirmation has been received that there are four women in custody. They were
initially taken to Njube Police Station but have since been moved to Bulawayo Central. A
lawyer is attempting to obtain access, said a spokesperson. The women were part of a
group involved in a community based protest aimed at both Government and Council schools,
which have continued to turn away children for non-payment of fees. The women delivered
messages to schools in Bulawayo and
Harare requesting that Headmasters stop sending
children away for non-payment of fees. In Chitungwiza, over 200 women visited three
schools, namely Fungisai Government, Farai Council and Seke High
Schools. In Harare
hundreds of members protested at Glenview 7 Primary, Glenview High Council, Dzivarasekwa
High and Fundo Primary Schools
and it was the
same situation in Bulawayo were Woza
activists targeted several schools. |