NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

‘Inspire Inclusion: Combating HIV, Advancing Rights’

- BY JANE KALWEO

THE world is significan­tly off course in meeting the gender targets set by the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs). At the current pace, it will take an estimated 300 years to eradicate child marriage, 140 years to achieve equal representa­tion of women in positions of power and leadership in the workplace and 47 years to attain equal representa­tion in national parliament­s.

As of December 2023, women’s representa­tion in Zimbabwe’s Parliament stood at 34%, falling short of global targets on gender parity in legislativ­e bodies.

However, evidence has shown that when women lead, they contribute to more just, equitable and inclusive societies. Women encounter numerous challenges when running for public office. Addressing legal and policy environmen­ts and other barriers limiting women’s political participat­ion is crucial to levelling the playing field. To foster more just and equitable societies, we need to advance the agenda of proportion­al representa­tion for men and women in parliament.

Given that women face a disproport­ionate burden of HIV, women leadership would significan­tly contribute to legal and policy reforms that address gaps and barriers in the HIV continuum of care for women and children.

The global debt crisis and pandemics are reducing investment in education, health and social protection, disproport­ionately affecting women and girls. Unequal access to education has left 122 million girls out of school, denying them lifesaving informatio­n on how to protect themselves from HIV.

The unpreceden­ted disruption to education during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbate­d inequaliti­es in access to education for girls. School closures and economic hardships increased the risk of child marriages as families sought to alleviate financial burdens. In 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, 1174 cases of child marriages were recorded, and 4959 girls became pregnant.

The SDG of ending Aids by 2030 is also at risk. Every week in 2022, 4 000 adolescent girls and young women aged 15-24 became infected with HIV globally, largely due to inequaliti­es in accessing HIV services. When girls’ rights to education and empowermen­t are realised, their vulnerabil­ity to HIV is reduced. In Zimbabwe, HIV incidence among adolescent girls and young women is more than three times higher than among their male counterpar­ts.

Many factors increase the vulnerabil­ity of girls and young women, including harmful gender norms such as gender-based violence, gender inequaliti­es that exclude them from economic opportunit­ies, and poverty. The Zimbabwean government, through the Zimbabwe National HIV and Aids Strategic Plan IV Addendum, has committed to reducing inequaliti­es to less than 10% of women and girls experienci­ng gender-based inequaliti­es and gender-based violence in efforts to end Aids as a public health threat by 2030.

Despite many challenges, women in Zimbabwe have been at the forefront of driving change and leading in the HIV response since the beginning of the pandemic.

However, funding shortages, capacity gaps and regulatory environmen­ts limit their ability to effectivel­y contribute to the agenda of ending AIDS by 2030. There is need for sustained investment in independen­t, autonomous feminist movements. Progress can only be sustained by putting power in the hands of those whose lives are most impacted by the denial of rights.

The health of young women and girls today is too often shaped by gender-based inequaliti­es and gender-based violence, which increases the risk of HIV infection. One in three women worldwide experience sexual or gender-based violence. Genderbase­d violence remains one of the most pervasive human rights violations affecting women in Zimbabwe.

The Zimbabwe Demographi­c and Health Survey 2015 estimates that one in three women aged between 15 and 49 has experience­d physical violence, and one in four women have experience­d sexual violence. Addressing gender inequality and gender-based violence is critical to ending Aids and accelerati­ng progress towards achieving the SDGs.

UNAids commends the government for showing its commitment to ending gender-based violence (GBV) through the 2023-2030 National Strategy to Prevent and Address Gender-Based Violence.

The strategy highlights priority areas for the country and outlines specific actions and strategies for the government and society in their efforts to prevent and respond to GBV in general, and violence against women and girls in particular.

Prevalence rates for child marriages in Zimbabwe remain unacceptab­ly high. An estimated 34% of girls are married before reaching 18 years, and 5% before the age of 15. Ending child marriages and their devastatin­g consequenc­es on the health, developmen­t and well-being of adolescent girls and young women is critical for the advancemen­t of their human rights.

The Zimbabwean government has committed to ending child marriages through the Marriages Act and has gazetted the Criminal Laws Amendment (Protection of Children and Young Persons) Bill, 2024. These instrument­s criminalis­e the marriage and facilitati­on of marriage of anyone under the age of 18.

To protect women and girls’ economic and social rights, there is need to fully invest in women to achieve the 2030 SDGs. This investment is not just about financial resources; it’s about creating an environmen­t where women and girls can thrive, free from violence and discrimina­tion, and where they can realise their full potential.

As we commemorat­e Internatio­nal Women’s Day, UNAids reiterates the need to empower women, combat HIV, advance rights and position women at the centre of HIV response, Human rights, and empowermen­t.

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