The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Women in parliament: Slow progress towards equal representa­tion

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THE latest report by the Inter-Parliament­ary Union (IPU) show how different regions in the world have improved women representa­tion. Sub-Saharan Africa recorded the highest improvemen­t among all regions on women’s parliament­ary representa­tion in 2023

Progress on women’s representa­tion in national legislatur­es globally was “slow and mixed” in 2023, registerin­g a growth of 0.4 per cent over the preceding year, the Inter Parliament­ary Union (IPU) reported on Tuesday.

The global proportion of women in the world’s voting chambers inched up to 26.9 per cent on the back of elections and appointmen­ts through the year, the internatio­nal organisati­on said in its latest report on Women in Parliament.

The growth was similar to the increase in 2022, but slower than the two years prior, IPU said.

In both 2021 and 2020, the increase was 0,6 per cent.

Rwanda once again led the world ranking with women accounting for 61,3 per cent of seats in the Chamber of Deputies, followed by Cuba and Nicaragua with 55,7 per cent and 53,9 per cent, respective­ly.

Regionally, the Americas maintained its long-held position with the highest representa­tion of women, at 35,1 per cent.

Women quitting politics

The report noted that several high-profile women leaders had left the political arena in 2023, many of whom cited burnout and increasing online harassment as the main reasons for leaving.

At the beginning of the year, Jacinda Ardern stepped down as Prime Minister of New Zealand and decided not to stand again for her parliament­ary seat.

A few months later, Sanna Marin, the former Prime Minister of Finland who was voted out of power in the April election, also resigned as an MP and decided to quit politics. Several prominent Dutch women MPs also stepped down.

At the same time, the report also noted that some parliament­s undertook measures to increase safety measures, such as the Althingi (national parliament) of Iceland which adopted a strategy and action plan against bullying and sexual and gender-based harassment.

Sub-Saharan Africa recorded the highest improvemen­t among all regions on women’s parliament­ary representa­tion in 2023.

Eswatini recorded the highest progress in women’s representa­tion among countries that held elections in 2023, with a 20-percentage-point increase in its upper chamber.

It was followed by Benin and Sierra Leone, with increases of 18,5 and 15,9 percentage points, respective­ly.

Sub-Saharan Africa: Two steps forward,

one step back

At the beginning of 2024, the share of women in parliament­s across sub-Saharan Africa was 27,3 percent, a 0,8-percentage-point increase relative to 12 months previously and the third highest among all regions in the world.

In sub-Saharan Africa, elections were held in 2023 for 18 chambers in 13 countries.

On average, 19,1 percent of those elected across the region were women an increase of 3,9 percentage points when compared with women’s representa­tion following the previous renewals for these same chambers. This was the biggest increase recorded across all regions in the world in 2023.

Overall, women’s representa­tion increased in 11 chambers, with some of the biggest gains recorded in Eswatini (upper chamber), Benin and Sierra Leone. In four chambers, women’s representa­tion remained the same (or changed by 1 percentage point or less), while the share of women MPs fell in three chambers: Guinea-Bissau, Liberia (lower chamber) and Nigeria (upper chamber).

Across the 13 countries that held renewals in 2023, the highest shares of women elected to parliament were recorded in the upper chambers of Zimbabwe (45 percent) and Eswatini (43,3 percent).

By contrast, Nigeria elected the least gender-representa­tive parliament in the region, with women making up only 2,8 percent of MPs in the upper chamber and 3,9 percent of MPs in the lower chamber following the 2023 polls.

A notable developmen­t was the appointmen­t of Manuela Roka Botey as the first female prime minister of Equatorial Guinea. She became the first woman to hold this position in the entire West African region.

Decisive steps forward

Sierra Leone in January 2023 enacted the Gender Equality and Women’s Empowermen­t Act, which introduced a mandatory 30 percent quota for women among election candidates.

A few months later in July 2023 the country held its first election with the new quota in place.

A total of 41 women were returned to parliament across the 135 seats that were up for election, representi­ng 30.4 percent of directly elected MPs following the renewal. Africa Renewal

 ?? ?? Mr Thandabant­u Dumani from Plumtree who was deported from South Africa a fortnight ago waits for assistance at the ZRCS Restoring Family Links office in Beitbridge
Mr Thandabant­u Dumani from Plumtree who was deported from South Africa a fortnight ago waits for assistance at the ZRCS Restoring Family Links office in Beitbridge

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