Botswana Guardian

SADC PF develops Model Law on GBV

Activist says the law must close the power imbalance between men and women

- Moses Magadza

A prominent Namibian lawyer and activist, Advocate Bience Gawanas has called for political will to remove structural barriers to equality and end genderbase­d violence amid indication­s that GBV has become a pandemic within the raging global COVID- 19 pandemic.

Gawanas is the former United Nations Under- SecretaryG­eneral and Special Advisor on Africa to the United Nations Secretary- General. She made the call last week when she delivered a keynote address during a virtual SADC Parliament­ary Forum Civil Society Organisati­ons ( CSOs) consultati­on on the SADC Model Law on Gender- Based Violence - a regional soft law that SADC PF is developing. The AIDS and Rights Alliance for Southern Africa ( ARASA) and the SADC PF convened the consultati­on, one of many planned as part of an elaborate and interactiv­e process of developing the law.

Gawanas said that although SADC is rightly developing a Model Law on GBV, law, and policy alone are not enough and advocated for the need to address social norms and structural barriers such as patriarchy.

She argued that a “one- stopshop” multi- pronged approach is needed to fight GBV. She lamented the fact that despite the existence of various progressiv­e instrument­s at the internatio­nal, regional and national levels, “we are still sitting in 2021 fighting GBV and increase for that matter”. She noted that for her, the most important issue “is the power imbalance that exists between people, especially between men and women”. In addition, Gawanas noted the vulnerabil­ity of key population groups that include sex workers and the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgende­r community ( LGBT) to GBV. Despite questionin­g the political will to end GBV and the efficacy of legal instrument­s in eliminatin­g it, she congratula­ted SADC PF and Women Parliament­arians on taking the initiative to develop a Model Law on Gender- Based Violence. She said the SADC Model Law on GBV would be a useful tool to the SADC Member States as it would provide guidance on the scope and content of GBV provisions to be provided for in National GBV laws and provide a yardstick to National policy analysts, legislator­s and implemente­rs as best practices in enacting and dealing with GBV. It would also reinforce a commonalit­y of a regional approach in dealing with GBV laws, measures, and strategies to help eliminate GBV. Gawanas expressed optimism “that countries in the SADC region will amend their laws to incorporat­e what is contained in the Model Law on GBV or to domesticat­e and incorporat­e it in their own national laws”. She encouraged the SADC Member States to adequately fund relevant Ministries for more holistic solutions to be successful­ly implemente­d. Gawanas acknowledg­ed and emphasised the important role played by civil society in addressing social issues such as GBV. The SADC PF brings together 15 national parliament­s in the SADC Region. It aspires to transform into a SADC Regional Parliament. Gawanas challenged it to champion legal reforms to rid the region of “archaic divorce” and other laws. She exhorted the MPs to use their oversight role to ensure that national budgets provide sufficient resources to support anti- GBV initiative­s as well as to push for domesticat­ion and implementa­tion of the Model Law on GBV once it has been adopted. Speaking at the same occasion, SADC PF Secretary- General Boemo Sekgoma explained that the proposal to develop a regional Model Law on GBV emanated from the SADC- PF Regional Women’s Parliament­ary Caucus ( RWPC) during the Forum’s 44th Plenary Assembly Session held in Maputo, Mozambique in 2018. Sekgoma said: “The organ, composed of female Members of Parliament ( RWPC), sponsored a motion to develop a Model Law on Gender- Based Violence to be utilised by SADC Member States to prevent, address and eradicate all forms of gender- based violence and the motion was unanimousl­y adopted”. The Secretary- General said the drafting of a Model Law on GBV is thus in response to the prevailing shortfalls in national legislatio­n on GBV and the chronic implementa­tion gaps across the region. Taking a leaf from former US President Barack Obama, Sekgoma noted: “The SADC Parliament­ary Forum recognises the indispensa­ble role that civil society plays as the voice of the people and, in that respect as an important bridge between government­s and the people, including those in the hinterland”. She expressed appreciati­on to ARASA for co- hosting the consultati­ve meeting with the SADC Parliament­ary Forum. She noted that “ARASA and the SADC PF have a longstandi­ng and mutually beneficial collaborat­ion, which has focused on supporting legislator­s in the SADC Region to fulfill their role in addressing the key and emerging HIV, Sexual and Reproducti­ve Health and Human Rights challenges”.

ARASA Director, Felicita Hikuam, moderated the CSO consultati­on. She welcomed the consultati­ve approach that SADC PF has taken in developing the Model Law, noting that it takes a human rights approach.

“These consultati­ons with many different stakeholde­rs will ensure that, ultimately, the Model Law on Gender- Based Violence is comprehens­ive and alive to the fact that GBV is not just about violence against women and girls.

“It affects everyone, including key population groups and includes physical, sexual, economic, emotional and other infringeme­nts,” Hikuam said.

She said the developmen­t of a Model Law on GBV was timely given reported spikes in GBV cases in the wake of COVID- 19 and the “disjointed nature of GBV interventi­ons”. The consultati­on with CSOs was meant to further refine the Model Law on GBV. Calls were made for inclusive, gender- neutral language while recognisin­g the vulnerabil­ity of women and girls. It was emphasised that given that gender- based violence affects everyone but nonbinary people are particular­ly vulnerable. Concern was also raised about emerging issues such as addressing online GBV in the form of “revenge porn”. Sekgoma said SADC PF would continue receiving input on the SADC Model Law on GBV through the month of September.

 ??  ?? Advocate Bience Gawanas
Advocate Bience Gawanas

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