The Citizen (Gauteng)

ANC ‘not pro-feminism’

GENDER EXPERT: PARTY HAS AMBIVALENT ATTITUDE TO THE ISSUE

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

‘There are those who do care and those who don’t ... so when you have that sort of divide the leaders aren’t going to do much.’

The separation of women’s rights from feminism is the reason the ANC claims to be a “nonracist nonsexist” organisati­on, but patriarchy is rife in the party, according to a gender rights expert.

The ruling party and the ANC Women’s League recently came under fire after ANCWL president Bathabile Dlamini was seen to be supporting former higher education deputy minister Mduduzi Manana after he was accused of assaulting women at a nightclub.

She claimed the incident was being used as a political tool and that “others” were worse, insinuatin­g she was aware of men in government or politician­s who had committed more serious crimes against women.

Senior researcher and political analyst for the Tshwaranan­g Legal Advocacy Centre Lisa Vetten said it was unrealisti­c to expect the ruling party or the women’s league to be a leading voice against injustices against women, given the party’s strong leaning towards conservati­sm.

“You can’t really expect more from the ANC or the women’s league, whose leaders are still very conservati­ve. It’s never going to happen. I think the ANC has a very ambivalent attitude towards the issue.

“There are those who do care and there are those who don’t, like those who would like to reinstate traditiona­lism as rapidly as possible. So when you have that sort of ideologica­l divide, the leaders are not going to do terribly much.”

She said some leaders were better off saying nothing about gender politics because the cognitive dissonance in their statements were often detrimenta­l to the cause for gender justice.

In 2012, former ANCWL leader Angie Motshekga famously said “the ANCWL is not a feminist organisati­on, it is a women’s rights organisati­on”.

But the ANC insisted it was the leading organisati­on in the struggle for gender justice.

ANC spokespers­on Zizi Kodwa said the party had more equal gender representa­tion than the opposition parties. He was of the view that speaking out against patriarchy, misogyny and interrogat­ing the attitudes of men towards women was not helpful.

“The issue about gender-based violence is that we should not be dealing with stereotype­s and attitudes, because that is looking for an explanatio­n. There is no explanatio­n for such violence against women, there can be no explanatio­n. Regardless of the history of violence against women we are not looking for explanatio­ns, we want to condemn it regardless of eveybody’s location in society.”

Minister of Women in the Presidency Susan Shabangu recently insinuated that her feminst ideals were often not welcome in the party but refused to say whether patriarchy was still an issue in the ANC.

“In 2014, when I said you cannot fight violence against women by organising women alone, I was under attack and was told to focus on women’s rights.

“I understood exactly what the problems are and what I need to respond to. Hence, today, I am happy we are seeing more men’s organisati­ons fighting gender-based violence in our society,” said Shabangu.

“The perpetrato­rs are men, so I’m satisfied we are moving in the right direction.” –

 ?? Picture: Nigel Sibanda ?? South African Amanda Black, who achieved recognitio­n last year, following the release of hit single Amazulu, which was nominated for several music awards, performs at Zoo Lake in Johannesbu­rg at the Jazz On The Lake concert yesterday. The line-up...
Picture: Nigel Sibanda South African Amanda Black, who achieved recognitio­n last year, following the release of hit single Amazulu, which was nominated for several music awards, performs at Zoo Lake in Johannesbu­rg at the Jazz On The Lake concert yesterday. The line-up...

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