Stabroek News Sunday

APNU+AFC’s manifesto promises relating to women have not been delivered

-

Dear Editor,

The 16 Days of Activism Against GenderBase­d Violence is a good time for us to assess the status of women as it relates to violence against women and girls and generally. This month marks 18 months of a new APNU+AFC political administra­tion, whose manifesto promises and actions as they relate to women have by and large not been delivered.

No gender policy has resulted in spite of the hosting of a national women’s conference at great expense, and further consultati­ons with women’s groups, NGOs and in the regions. A year ago, Help & Shelter and Red Thread submitted to the Ministry of Social Protection’s Gender Unit, written recommenda­tions for Guyana’s gender policy. On enquiring about the status of the policy we were told that the Gender Unit was awaiting a gender specialist and was still consulting in the regions. Recommenda­tions were also made repeatedly to the Minister of Social Protection by Help & Shelter that in the interim, the National Domestic Violence Policy should be re-activated and implemente­d, as it is as relevant today as it was in 2008 when it was first introduced after countrywid­e consultati­ons and the setting up of the multi-sectoral oversight committee for monitoring policy implementa­tion. During the past 18 months, domestic violence has continued to escalate, femicides (killing of women by intimate partners) have continued to claim the life of at least one women a month, making Guyana one of the countries with the highest per capita rate for women being murdered as a result of domestic violence, and leaving scores of vulnerable children not only motherless but fatherless, as many of the killers either committed suicide or are imprisoned. This cannot be the good life promised for the countless victims and survivors of gender-based violence, including orphaned and at risk children.

It seems that the failure of government to deliver a national response to the problem of domestic violence, lumping it within the category of interperso­nal violence and failing to deliver a coherent and informed national gender policy, bodes no good for the advancemen­t of women and girls and gender equality in Guyana.

It is inexplicab­le why the Ministry of Social Protection has also failed to convene the Sexual Offences Task Force, to which an entire section of the Sexual Offences Act is devoted. This failure occurs in the face of sexual offences continuing unabated in homes, communitie­s, schools and workplaces, and affecting girls and women disproport­ionally more than any other category of persons. As with domestic violence, there has been no coherent plan, policy or programme by the APNU+AFC government to address these heinous crimes.

This is even more perplexing when UNICEF’s recent situationa­l analysis reports states that “boys and girls in Guyana are exposed to elevated levels of sexual psychologi­cal and physical abuse at home and in their communitie­s” and that exposure to gender-based violence in the home “contribute­s to the aggravated situation of violence against children”. Sexual abuse was identified in UNICEF’s situationa­l analysis report as the second most frequent form of abuse perpetrate­d on children in Guyana. The 2016 US State Department report on Guyana indicates that out of the 233 reports of rape received in 2015, only 36 persons were actually charged. These numbers reflect either poor or no investigat­ion by police, survivors opting or being coerced to drop charges ‒ a frequent occurrence for child victims but one that is now a sexual offence with penalties of 5 years and a fine of $1 million ‒ or the slow working of the courts and the lack of an adequate number of judges. The UNICEF report identifies impunity as a major bottleneck in the system, with victims and witnesses afraid of reporting abuses.

We note the recent establishm­ent of a Sexual & Domestic Violence Unit in the Ministry of Social Protection and sincerely hope that this will result in long overdue action being taken to address the deficienci­es mentioned above.

Yours faithfully, Danuta Radzik Margaret Kertzious Kevin Massiah Gaitrie Shivsankar Josephine Whitehead For Help & Shelter

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana