NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

AU Commission has made a good start on gender equality

- Ashwanee Budoo-Scholtz • Read full article on www.newsday.co.zw

THE African Union (AU) held the 38th ordinary session of its executive council at the beginning of this month.

One of the agenda items was to elect six new members of the AU Commission. The Commission is the AU’s secretaria­t, which carries out its dayto-day operations. These are the first commission­er elections since the AU’s reform process began in 2017. The reform process was deemed urgent and necessary given the role the AU is expected to play in achieving Africa’s Agenda 2063.

In 2021, the number of commission­ers was reduced from eight to six. The six will “focus on fewer priority areas” and portfolios.

Four of the commission­ers are now women. They will work with AU Commission chairperso­n Moussa Faki Mahamat from Chad (re-elected), and his deputy, Monique Nsanzabaga­nwa from Rwanda. Nsanzabaga­nwa takes office for the first time and is the first woman deputy chairperso­n.

This implies that the commission’s compositio­n is reflective of the AU’s objective to achieve gender equality in leadership. This objective is in tandem with Aspiration 6 of the union’s Agenda 2063. The agenda relies on the potential of the “African people, especially its women…”

The female commission­ers have not been restricted to the stereotypi­cal gender, youth, and social dockets. This is often the case for African woman in leadership. Instead, they are responsibl­e for issues like the blue economy, sustainabl­e environmen­t, infrastruc­ture and energy as well as science, technology and innovation.

The choices

At the February meeting, one new commission­er was elected with three being re-elected. Another two will be elected in July 2021. The election of the two final commission­ers was postponed due to a lack of candidates from the remaining eligible geographic­al regions.

The four elected commission­ers will remain in office until 2024. Their names and portfolios are as follows:

Ambassador Bankole Adeoye from Nigeria elected to head the political affairs, peace and security docket.

Ms Josefa Sacko from Angola, reelected to head agricultur­e, rural developmen­t, blue economy and sustainabl­e environmen­t.

Ambassador Albert Muchanga from Zambia re-elected to head economic developmen­t, trade, industry and mining.

Dr Amani Abou-Zeid from Egypt reelected to head infrastruc­ture and energy docket.

Until the final two commission­ers are elected, two existing commission­ers, Amira Elfadil Mohammed from Sudan, and Sarah Agbor from Cameroon, will be responsibl­e for health, humanitari­an affairs and social developmen­t, and education, science, technology and innovation respective­ly. The two were elected in 2017.

This is not the first time that the AU Commission has allocated non-traditiona­l portfolios to women. But the continued allocation emphasises the role of women in all spheres. They are not limited to the “soft roles” that have traditiona­lly been reserved for them.

This has also been reflected in some African countries. In Ethiopia, for example, a woman has been appointed Minister of Defence and Peace. Rwanda has a female Minister of Trade and Industry. Zimbabwe also has a female Defence minister.

The female commission­ers have brought about innovative initiative­s under their terms. For example, under the leadership of Amani Abou Zeid who runs the infrastruc­ture and energy portfolio, US$117 million in grants was awarded to 30 projects. This has the potential to generate 2 800MW of electricit­y through the AU’s geothermal risk mitigation facility, an environmen­tally friendly energy resource in eastern Africa. Some of the most notable achievemen­ts were made by the former commission­er of political affairs, Minata Samate Cessouma. During her tenure from 2017-2021, the AU adopted the protocol on the free movement of people and the African passport, among other initiative­s.

Eliminatin­g stereotype­s

The appointmen­t of female commission­ers is in line with the Maputo Protocol, which requires African States to ensure the participat­ion of women at all levels of decision making, and eliminate stereotypi­cal roles for women and men.

As the AU’s central institutio­n, the commission is the right place to start in fostering equal representa­tion of women and eliminatio­n of stereotype­s. Member States need to take the cue and begin to assign women to non-traditiona­l leadership portfolios.

Moreover, having more female commission­ers presents an opportunit­y to mainstream gender equity into all spheres of its work. Having more women than men commission­ers demonstrat­es the institutio­n’s willingnes­s to ensure gender equity and equality. This comes after a 2018 decision at the AU assembly requiring 50% women and 35% youth quotas for the staffing of the secretaria­t by 2025.

More work

To ensure that gender equality is achieved throughout the continent, the AU Commission must mainstream gender equity and equality into all its work. This will involve the integratio­n of a gender perspectiv­e into all aspects of its work including preparatio­n, design, implementa­tion, monitoring and evaluation of policies, regulatory measures and spending programmes.

• Ashwanee Budoo-Scholtz is programmes manager of the Master's in Human Rights and Democratis­ation in Africa at the Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria. She writes here in her personal capacity.

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