The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Changing the women empowermen­t narrative

- Hon Sithembiso Nyoni

he annual United Nations

on the Status of Women (CSW) conference was held in New York last month. Zimbabwe sent a delegation led by Women and Youth Affairs Minister Sithembiso Nyoni to join attendees from 192 countries. Our reporter Sharon Munjenjema spoke to the minister on her return from the event that ran under the theme “Challenges and Opportunit­ies in Achieving Gender Equity and the Empowermen­t of Rural Women and Girls”. We publish Minister Nyoni’s responses in her own words AS THE Zimbabwe delegation to the conference, we had intended to take many rural women with us.

These women applied for visas, but unfortunat­ely they were denied the travel documents by the American embassy.

We don’t know why the visas were rejected, it was their policy, but they (US embassy in Zimbabwe) just said it was a directive from Washington DC.

A lot of countries were affected by this directive, it was not just Zimbabwe.

So I want the Zimbabwean women living in rural areas to know it was not about them, it affected all rural women throughout the world.

Kenya talked of the issue of leaving their rural women behind and so did Uganda, India and so forth.

This conference took place over two weeks. The first week was the official opening and we had readings of ministeria­l statements, interactiv­e dialogues and side events.

The second week was characteri­sed by negotiatio­ns based on the ministeria­l statements, dialogues and side events of the previous week.

The negotiatio­ns were done so that we come up with agreed conclusion­s.

As Zimbabwe, we were very privileged to have the First Lady Amai Auxillia Mnangagwa as part of our delegation.

The delegation also comprised Minister of State for Manicaland Province Cde Monica Mutsvangwa, the Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly Mabel Chinomona, Hon Paurina Mpariwa and the Zimbabwe Gender Commission chairperso­n (Margaret Mukahanana-Sangarwe).

We also had civic society representa­tives who came with us.

The good thing is that we prepared in advance before going to New York.

There were a lot of meetings prior to CSW, so when we got there I was happy, as the leader of the delegation, that we spoke with one voice. We had a side event where we were led by the First Lady. It was well attended by Zimbabwean­s and members from other countries, both men and women.

It made a great impact on the whole conference because we were the first country to push for and give concrete evidence-based results on the importance of intangible resources for the empowermen­t of women.

Our intangible­s included health, which our First Lady is pioneering, as well as education and training (skills developmen­t).

The outcome was that even at the negotiatio­ns, the intangible means of production and intangible resources for women empowermen­t became major sub-themes.

So our side event really made a mark on the whole conference.

To explain the side event there is need to give more detail as to how the conference runs.

There is a main auditorium meeting which is chaired by the chairperso­n of CSW, where everybody gathers.

But each country or organisati­on can have side events in smaller halls where they present specific sub-themes or topics of interest related to the main theme.

So in Zimbabwe, our side event was centred on the means of empowering women and the tangible resources we spoke of are land and equipment, etcetera.

But a lot of people leave out the intangible which is education, training and health.

As Zimbabwean­s we were saying you cannot empower an unhealthy woman.

The empowermen­t of an uneducated woman is limited because her sphere of comprehend­ing issues is also limited. So the focus was on the intangible means of production.

As Zimbabwe, our impact was felt by the whole conference. We were happy that as a country we were able to lead. It was noted that women and girls need education and health to be empowered and to propel themselves.

Empowermen­t has to be sustainabl­e and you have to engage the empowered person and she has to be the custodian for empowermen­t.

If a woman is not educated they will keep on depending on someone else to give them or teach them new concepts and researches.

They won’t be able to research for themselves, they cannot surf the internet, network on cyberspace or understand their horizon. In short, their empowermen­t will be limited.

Zimbabwe also initiated the change in the narrative. The theme stated “rural women” and we said to them, what is rural is not the woman, but the environmen­t.

So the narrative needed to be changed to say “women living in rural areas”.

When we talk about the condition of rural women, usually people talk about the woman and not the condition and this is why we failed to bring a change because our focus is on the wrong target.

The woman, yes, in terms of the intangible but the tangible is the rural area.

Is there water? Is there transport? Is there communicat­ion? Is this woman in possession of land? Does she have access to money?

Those are the things that the world usually look for, but they look for that in the wrong target, the woman, rather than the rural area.

So if we reverse this narrative, we will develop the rural area for women who are educated to live there and earn a living.

We also had a session where we had recognitio­n of women and girls living with disabiliti­es. We also had discussion­s on widows and how they need to be empowered in order for them to carry on with their lives. Most widows are in desperate situations economical­ly and socially.

So we looked at measures and ways to equip them economical­ly as well as legally so that they claim their rights.

In short, Zimbabwe really made a mark at the event. Zimbabwe’s thinking influenced the narrative of the whole conference at the negotiatio­ns. For the first time in history, there was separation between tangible and intangible means of production and means of empowering women.

Agreed resolution­s from the conference are not yet out.

We are going to call a big meeting in the country this month for all those who attended the conference to report to the nation. Each sector will give its recommenda­tions that are applicable to the country, that is, Government, Parliament and civil society.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe