The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Women eye PG’s post

- Fidelis Munyoro Chief Court Reporter

WOMEN are appealing to President Mnangagwa to consider appointing a woman to head the office of the Prosecutor-General as part of efforts to empower them and enhance gender equality.

Government has started hunting for a substantiv­e Prosecutor-General following the publicatio­n of the resignatio­n of Prosecutor-General Advocate Ray Goba in the Government Gazette last month.

Mr Kumbirai Hodzi is the acting Prosecutor-General.

The publicatio­n of Mr Goba’s resignatio­n paved way for the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) to start advertisin­g the post ahead of public interviews.

PROWEB, a prominent organisati­on for women in Zimbabwe with over 1 500 members, has implored the President Mnangagwa to enforce gender equality principles enshrined in the Constituti­on to consider a woman for the esteemed office.

Presenting a paper titled, “Creating an Enabling Environmen­t” during a breakfast meeting with President Mnangagwa in Harare on Monday, PROWEB member Ms Phillipa Philips saluted the Government for efforts to address some of the gender inequaliti­es women face.

She bemoaned the marginalis­ation of women across economic, social and political spheres.

“In these decision-making roles, the implementa­tion of gender balancing is still not taking place,” said Ms Phillips.

“We still do not see gender balancing numbers in Cabinet, parastatal­s boards and ambassador­ial assignment­s. Even in the prosecutin­g authority, the substantiv­e Prosecutor-General should be a woman since the Attorney–General, Chief Justice, Minister of Justice and Judge President are all male.”

President Mnangagwa said Government ratified the Convention on Eliminatio­n of all forms Discrimina­tion Against Women and signed the Sadc Declaratio­n on Gender and Developmen­t, as well as the Sadc Protocol on Gender Equality.

“This demonstrat­es Government’s unwavering support to the protection of women’s rights and access to equal opportunit­ies in political, economic and social spheres of life as envisaged in sections 20, 56 and 80 of our national Constituti­on,” Ms Phillips said.

“Furthermor­e, my administra­tion stands ready to uphold the UN Women’s aspiration to promote real empowermen­t through a structural shift to reduce inequaliti­es as a result of vulnerabil­ity, social standing, race, marital status, religion ethnicity or type of work, among other aspects.”

The women implored the President to use his influence to enforce gender equality principles in the execution of the Command Agricultur­e Programme to ensure women get equal access to resources and farming inputs.

Ms Phillips said women wanted the Government to ensure women access land.

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