China Daily

African women and children need special care

- The author is a research and policy adviser at the Africa Policy Institute. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

As witnessed globally and more specifical­ly in Africa, women and children are becoming increasing­ly vulnerable to loss of livelihood, and domestic and gender-based violence in times of civil unrest, natural disasters and economic uncertaint­ies. Unfortunat­ely, the uncertaint­y over the novel coronaviru­s pandemic has created an environmen­t exacerbati­ng diverse forms of violence against women and children in Africa.

Among the measures to prevent and control the spread of the virus is the closure of schools, which according to United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on data has kept about 1.54 billion students away from school, 743 million of whom are girls with more than 111 million of them being from least-developed countries. In particular, South Sudan, Mali and Niger, which have some of the lowest enrolment and completion rates for girls, have seen 4 million girls locked out of school.

Essentiall­y, this means children, especially girls, dropping out of school or having limited or no access to online education, as many of them double up as caregivers at home. They are also vulnerable to sexual exploitati­on by the people they are living with during lockdowns and quarantine­s. These perpetrato­rs could include close relatives, guardians and/or outsiders delivering goods or services to the house.

Similarly, there may be a rise in teenage pregnancie­s as witnessed during the 2014-16 Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone — about 18,000 teenagers became pregnant according to the United Nations Population Fund. The economic downturn that analysts say will follow the pandemic will leave many girls vulnerable to early marriages, especially those who lose their parents/guardians to the virus. The situation is worrisome, especially because each year about 12 million girls across the world are married before reaching their 18th birthday.

Africa accounts for 16 percent of the global population but just 1 percent of global healthcare spending. The doctor/patient ratio is two per 10,000. The World Health Organizati­on in its 2018 State of Health in the WHO African Region report highlighte­d that the 39 percent of the region’s health budget is spent on medical products, 14 percent on health workers and 7 percent on infrastruc­ture, which is low compared with countries that have robust health systems and expend up to 40 percent on health workers and 33 percent on infrastruc­ture.

And given their weak healthcare systems, government­s in the region have reassigned their medical resources and personnel to tackle the pandemic, which has disrupted routine healthcare services such as maternity care — which, if not urgently addressed, would put women and their newborns at increased risk of mortality — limited access to basic contracept­ive methods and lack of availabili­ty of emergency contracept­ion — which may lead to unplanned pregnancie­s, and exposure to other medical complicati­ons in cases of rape and sexual violence.

Many women have become the silent victims of sexual violence during the lockdowns in the region. In South Africa, for example, since the beginning of the lockdown on March 27, there has been a surge in the number of complaints against gender-based violence: more than 2,300 complaints with only 148 suspects being charged. In Kenya, the National Council on the Administra­tion of Justice said on April 1 that sexual offenses have increased, accounting for up to 35.8 percent of all crimes reported since March 12, when Kenya reported its first coronaviru­s infection. The restrictio­ns on the movement of people, in some instances, have trapped women with abusive partners, and many of these women don’t go out to report domestic violence for fear of violating lockdown rules.

Women are also likely to be disproport­ionately affected by these restrictio­ns as key drivers of the agricultur­al sector and the informal economy, both of which are being severely undermined by the crisis.

Yet it’s never too late for the African government­s to change the situation and make women’s lives better. For that, they have to recognize shelters/centers for survivors as essential infrastruc­ture, bolster their resource capacity, and find ways to make them accessible to those who need them. The government­s should also set up emergency lines that function 24 hours a day to help the public; and the law enforcemen­t department should work closely with other department­s to ensure no culprit goes scot-free.

Also, women and children should be integrated into national preparedne­ss plans at the global, regional, national and local levels of any response mechanism against a public health emergency. The study of past epidemics shows the importance of a “twin-track” approach, supporting organizati­ons working directly with the survivors and responding to violence against women and girls.

As for humanitari­an response organizati­ons, they need to gather data on women and children who face violence during the pandemic, and include the medical care for such women and children in the future pandemic-response plan.

Women are also likely to be disproport­ionately affected by these restrictio­ns as key drivers of the agricultur­al sector and the informal economy, both of which are being severely undermined by the crisis.

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