The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Ellen Johnson Sirleaf: Feminist icon or femocrat?

Education is perhaps one area of policy in which Sirleaf made some significan­t progress towards ensuring equality for girls and women.

- Adama Juldeh Munu Correspond­ent ◆ Full article on www.herald. co.zw

AS President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf leaves office, it is tempting to speak of her as an “internatio­nal feminist icon”. Her power play is an ode to matrilinea­l politics which dominated the continent before the advent of colonialis­m.

Alongside the Queen Mother in the Kingdom of Baganda and the members of women’s assemblies in the Yoruba tribe, Sirleaf stands in a long line of strong African women, who led their communitie­s and nations.

Rising to power following Liberia’s devastatin­g civil war in 2005 and winning a second term in 2011, Sirleaf has symbolical­ly set a precedent for women in the country in a way few have done before her.

Yet in the world of politics, both on local and internatio­nal stages, symbolism does not always translate into practice and policies.

The example of the number of female candidates in the October 10 Liberian elections is a case in point.

Although Sirleaf appointed several women to high positions in finance and commerce in her first term, we do have to question how far-reaching Sirleaf’s efforts were, when only one woman — Macdella Cooper — out of 20 candidates ran for the top job.

While Sirleaf came out in full support of Cooper and all other women candidates who ran for parliament­ary seats, her party ranked below peripheral parties in putting forward female candidates. And this is in spite of legal amendments in 2014, which were supposed to propose greater representa­tion of women in roles across the political spectrum — a law that Sirleaf herself did not ratify.

Of course, there shouldn’t be the expectatio­n that Sirleaf’s two terms would have solved all women’s problems in Liberia, but it is important to question whether she made a concerted effort to change the status quo. Or were her politics just another example of “femocracy”, a term which Nigerian academic Amina Baba has defined as “an anti-democratic female power structure, which claims to exist for the advancemen­t of ordinary women . . . advancing the interests of small female elite . . . upholding the patriarcha­l status quo”.

Her successor will almost certainly be a man and parliament will be heavily men-dominated.

Women are making up only 16 percent of approved candidates for parliament­ary seats compared with 14 percent in Liberia’s 2011 elections.

Statistica­lly, it is hardly a jump across the river. If these numbers are anything to go by, the next president will have to work tirelessly to ensure Liberia can have a second woman president in the future.

And lack of representa­tion in politics is only one of the many problems women face in Liberia.

Early pregnancie­s and instances of gender-based violence are still common in Liberia.

So while women’s empowermen­t in the political sphere was and still is important, there were even more important issues that needed to be addressed during Sirleaf’s time in office to guarantee long-term gender equality in Liberia.

Sirleaf’s administra­tion did acknowledg­e these challenges and worked towards overcoming them, but once again these issues proved to be too complex and profound for a single administra­tion to tackle fully.

Education is perhaps one area of policy in which Sirleaf made some significan­t progress towards ensuring equality for girls and women.

Sirleaf, who has a degree from Harvard University, supported several schemes to ensure Liberian girls get an education, even when the country was battling a devastatin­g Ebola epidemic. But Liberia still ranked 114 out of 144 countries in World Economic Forum’s 2016 gender equality report (pdf), so there is a long way to go.

In her final presidenti­al address earlier this year, Sirleaf made the case to the legislativ­e assembly that education is a long-term aspiration and that traditiona­l methods need to be reformulat­ed. This will undoubtedl­y be an important foundation set by Sirleaf for the incoming president to build upon in the post-Sirleaf era.

During her time in office, Sirleaf also tried to eradicate a tragic practice that affects the lives of countless Liberian women: female genital mutilation (FGM). While she was vocal about the need to ban the practice, her efforts were not successful.

Admittedly, the fight against FGM was not an easy one to win. But for all the fights she has encountere­d, including her fight to end the civil war, which led to her winning the Nobel Peace prize in 2010 or her fight against Ebola, for her mandate to be outlived by this particular crisis is a sad travesty for her and all those young girls who are impacted.

In Liberia, secret women’s societies known as Sande carry out FGM, as part of a coming of age ritual.

The tradition is deeply rooted, with half of Liberian women subjected to it.

To this day, four in 10 Liberian women support the practice and it is carried out by almost all tribes and by both Muslim and Christian communitie­s, according to UNICEF.

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