CHILIMBA HELPING TO TURN TABLES
WO MEN in Zambia are still considered as dependants, but a group of 10 women in Lusaka’s Kanyama compound are turning the tables to disapprove the suppressive stereotypes which have kept many of them from owning or inheriting land and property.
These women are breaking the cultural syndrome through table banking, commonly known as
‘ ‘ Chilimba’’, a way to access and offer loans without going through a microfinance organisation.
According to a member of the group N ancy Bwalya, the group was formed in 2015.
Mrs Bwalya told the Daily N ation that the group has greatly boosted her social and economic well-being.
“I remember when I joined the group I took a loan of K5,000 and started my own business of selling second hand clothes. Since then, my business has been booming and I no longer depend on my husband to provide everything I need. We no longer have misunderstandings with my husband,” Mrs Bwalya said.
Another member of the group Betty Mwila agreed with her colleague, saying she has also greatly benefited from the Chilimba group.
“It is very difficult to ask for money from your husband to start up a business and help to cater for the needs of the family. You do not even know where to start from because most men are greedy when it comes to money, sometimes they even become violent,” Mrs Mwila said.
Mrs Mwila has invested in vegetable farming after receiving a K5,000 loan from the group.
She uses her profits to boost her savings and hopes to be able to the bank, the members share to take a bigger loan to buy a out the money depending on the piece of land for her farming. number of shares each has and
“My only wish right now is to financial need. borrow a bigger amount from a And group chairperson N amakau bank and buy land I can use for Mwiinga said trust, openness my farming,” she said. and honesty was vital in a
‘ ‘ Chilimba’’ literally means Chilimba group. grasping a bundle of money “We know each other very which has been collected from well, that is why it is so easy for members of an organised group. us to form the group and become
The strategy of ‘ ‘ Chilimba’’ each other’s guarantor. This is involves members meeting important because we have no monthly at an agreed location other security for the loans except and tabling their contributions, how well we know each which are referred to as shares. other,” Mrs Mwiinga said.
But unlike the conventional Zambia is largely a patriarchal practice of taking the collections society where women are denied access to land, which serves as the major tangible and valuable asset in securing any long term development loan.
Despite existing legislation outlawing any form of discrimination against women, the social and cultural structures have for years been used as a yardstick to determine the place of a woman in society.
So when Mrs Mwiinga thinks about where she has come from and where she is going, she is happy to be a member of the Chilimba group.
“My life has changed. I am now able to support my husband in paying school fees for our children. We are at peace with each other unlike before.
“My husband no longer worries about small things like sugar, or salt. He is happy that I joined the group,” Mrs Mwiinga said.
She adds that she would like to buy a two-acre piece of land to build rental houses as her long term plan to break the family from the chains of poverty.
“We have a small plot and whatever we grow is not enough for home consumption and sale. That is why my aim is to increase my shares to a level that I can take a huge loan to invest in more profitable business ventures,” she said.
The loans acquired through Chilimba are repaid at a minimal interest rate compared to the banks’ interest rates which exceed 40 percent in some cases.
As a rule, members know where each one lives, as the rotating monthly meetings are carried out in the homesteads.
This makes it easy for the members to trace loan defaulters.
In some of the groups, household property such as chairs, cooking utensils and television sets are attached to the loan as security.
A member who is unable to repay the loan within the set time limit is required to notify the group so that she can either be assisted or the period extended.
In extreme cases, where a member deliberately ignores informing the group or does not repay the loan, members are forced to take away the household property.
(ven as women find ways of empowering themselves economically, Government, development partners and other stakeholders still have a lot to do to eliminate the barriers that perpetuate gender discrimination in accessing resources.