The Herald (Zimbabwe)

‘Promote gender equality’

- Ruth Butaumocho Gender Editor

THE Zimbabwe Gender Commission has called on stakeholde­rs in both the private and public sectors to implement policies that deliberate­ly promote gender equality.

Speaking at a breakfast meeting of women leaders held under the theme “Diversity and Inclusiven­ess: Womenomics Makes the Difference” in Harare yesterday, Zimbabwe Gender Commission chairperso­n Mrs Margaret Mukahanana-Sangarwe said it was dishearten­ing that despite their numerical significan­ce, women continued to be left out of leadership positions.

“In spite of the existence of these constituti­onal provisions, instrument­s and policies promoting gender equality, evidence suggest that there is still a lot of work to do to ensure that boardrooms better reflect the gender diversity of our country,” she said.

Mrs Mukahanana-Sangarwe said a 2015 study to establish why women were being left out in crucial appointmen­ts in both the private and public sectors said women continue to bump into glass ceilings due to subtle, invisible sexist patriarcha­l ideologies that prevent them from getting higher positions.

“A study entitled “Measuring Difference­s on Board of Directors in Zimbabwe 2015” highlighte­d that out of 406 directors in the private sector, 10 percent were women; out of 64 chief executive officers of companies listed on the stock exchange, only three chief executive officers were females; and out of the 103 executives of state-owned parastatal­s, there were only 15 female chief executive officers,” she said.

“Out of 88 chairperso­ns of parastatal boards, women chairperso­ns only constitute 27 percent. In the public sector, the same trend appears, with only eight female permanent secretarie­s out of 26, and out of 26 cabinet Ministers, only three are women.”

These figures, Mrs Mukahanana-Sangarwe said, would only be reversed once stakeholde­rs take a rudimentar­y approach to address social perception­s that regard women as inferior to men. She called for the mentorship of disempower­ed women to help them grow through exchanging ideas and success stories.

The breakfast meeting was attended by several highly influentia­l women in the business sector such as chairperso­n of the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) Mrs Willia Bonyongwe and the president of Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce — who is also the managing director of Securico Security Services — Mrs Divine Ndhlukula.

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