NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Women’s representa­tion in the 10th Parliament: The metrics

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While the introducti­on of the women’s quota was a progressiv­e democratic gesture, its unintended consequenc­e was constraini­ng the filtering of competitiv­e electable women candidates to the quota representa­tion stream which yields no political power, constituen­cy and no constituen­cy developmen­t fund. While honourable, the quota system has in a way diluted the potency of women’s representa­tion.

Back to the metrics. According to the 1997 Southern African Developmen­t Community (Sadc) declaratio­n on gender and developmen­t, the minimum threshold for women’s representa­tion should be 30%. Sadly, in the August 2023 elections, 22 women were directly elected for the 210 lower house seats out of the 70 women who contested against a staggering 637 male candidates.

This equates to 11%, thus falling short of the Sadc declaratio­n threshold of 30%. An analysis has shown that this is an unhealthy trend in Zimbabwean elections. In 2018, the number of women who contested against men equated to a meagre 14%. The metrics paint a grim picture of women’s representa­tion in the 10th Parliament at Mt Hampden.

To expose the lackadaisi­cal democratic progress or lack thereof, it is important to go back in history. In the immediate aftermath of independen­ce in 1980, the first ever Parliament in Zimbabwe had only 3 women that equated to a mere 8% of the total seats in Parliament then.

In 1990, there was 11% women’s representa­tion; 14% in 1995; and a decline to 9% in 2000 then 16% in 2005. The metrics are depressing — let us just pause at 2005. Despite the increase in women’s representa­tion mostly owed to the women’s quota there is still nothing to celebrate with regards to women’s representa­tion and representa­tive democracy in Zimbabwe.

The grim reality was worsened by the pronouncem­ent of a maledomina­ted Cabinet by President Emmerson Mnangagwa soon after the August 2023 elections. As if the Parliament­ary marginalis­ation of women was not enough, President Mnangagwa went on to appoint only six (23%) women into his 26-member Cabinet. In total, out of President Mnangagwa’s 67 ministeria­l deployment­s (ministers, deputy ministers and permanent secretarie­s) only 17 (25%) were women. How then can the biggest marginalis­ed demographi­c group in the country be adequately and meaningful­ly be represente­d?

As we celebrate women’s history month, it is imperative that we underscore the importance of women’s inclusion and representa­tion. It is important to note that increased women's representa­tion in Parliament brings diverse perspectiv­es and experience­s to the decision-making process.

History, empirical and anecdotal evidence from countries like Rwanda, has shown that women lawmakers have been instrument­al in advocating policies that address gender-based violence, economic empowermen­t for women and improved access to healthcare and education.

To achieve these similar milestones, it is imperative for government, civil society organisati­ons, media houses and other developmen­t and human rights actors to start deliberate­ly, intentiona­lly and systematic­ally advancing the representa­tion and inclusion of women in Parliament and other governance entities.

Phillip Nyasha Fungurai is a human rights activist, Monitoring and Evaluation Specialist and interdisci­plinary researcher in the fields of human rights, peace, governance, civic participat­ion, developmen­t management and youth developmen­t. He currently serves as the Learning and Innovation Catalyst for the Zimbabwe Human Rights Associatio­n (ZimRights).

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