Cape Times

Luthulis led by revolution­ary morality

Luthulis led by integrity, compassion, selflessne­ss and revolution­ary morality

- PHUMZILE MLAMBO-NGCUKA Mlambo-Ngcuka is Under-SecretaryG­eneral and Executive Director: UN Women. This is an extract from the annual Chief Albert Luthuli Lecture she delivered on November 28

THANK you for the opportunit­y to deliver the 2020 Chief Albert Luthuli Memorial Lecture, in this momentous year where we are also celebratin­g the 25th anniversar­y of the Beijing Declaratio­n and Platform for Action. I'd like to pay my respects to Chief Albert Luthuli and Mama Nokukhanya, who was a leader in her own right.

We salute both of them and appreciate deeply the contributi­on and sacrifices they made for our country and our liberation. We are thankful for the ANC presidency of Albert Luthuli and its contributi­on to the foundation of our democracy, both in character and in substance.

Our Constituti­on reflects the values that Chief Luthuli stood for, and through it, his legacy lives on.

The theme for this lecture is “The 1995 World Conference on Women: Where to for South Africa and the rest of the African continent?”

Let me begin by reflecting on our participat­ion in Beijing, 25 years ago. South Africa had a formidable delegation; it was in 1995, and it was led by Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma. We were coming fresh out of our 1994 first democratic election and we were idealistic, determined, and eager to contribute to the global discourse on gender equality as well as to change our own circumstan­ces in our country.

In Beijing, the African women stood strong together and with other African women influenced and shaped the 12th critical areas adopted during the Beijing Platform for Action (BPFA):

1. Poverty. 2. Education, 3. Health,

4. Violence Against Women, 5. Armed Conflict, 6. Economy, 7. Power and Decision-making, 8. Institutio­nal

Mechanisms, 9. Human Rights, 10. Media, 11. Environmen­t and 12. The Girl Child.

Since then, we have seen some significan­t progress in all these areas, progress that is life changing and at the same time brittle. However, we still have a far way to go.

Gender equality is a public good – not a project for NGOs who have shouldered much of the responsibi­lity in many countries. It affects more than half of humanity. And it has an intergener­ational impact. Gender equality determines the level of developmen­t as well as the type of developmen­t that countries undergo and therefore it cannot happen without significan­t involvemen­t of government. So, the progress that we have seen has been influenced by these factors.

The greatest progress in the past 25 years took place in those countries where people remained engaged. Women remain engaged and government­s invested significan­tly in the areas they prioritise­d.

For example, some countries invested significan­tly in girls' education and made sure there was an increase in enrolment at the primary level. They invested in women's health and decreased maternal deaths by up to 38% by 2019. They also created institutio­ns and mechanisms such as women's ministries and women's commission­s, to push the gender equality agenda in spaces that were gender blind. We did that too in South Africa.

Many countries also changed passed laws that addressed gender inequality. They changed their constituti­ons to ensure that they were promoting and supporting gender equality in an unpreceden­ted way.

In South Africa, we were strong in this area, though not perfect. Because of our Constituti­on and because we passed laws in the first democratic Parliament.

To date, 131 countries have participat­ed actively in changing their laws and 35 constituti­ons have been amended to address systematic discrimina­tion against women and girls.

In South Africa, we also have to be decisive and not rely on customary laws and practices that discrimina­te against women, for example we have to address Ukuthwala, which robs young girls of their rights.

We have also seen some positive changes over the past 25 years, within women's participat­ion and leadership, which was top of the agenda in Beijing, though this too has been slow and uneven.

While most countries and political parties have promoted women's leadership, in some cases, it has been the electorate who has reversed those gains.

Data tells us that the global average of representa­tion of women in parliament is only 25%. This means 75% of all the laws in the world that govern us are made by men.

The number of women in leadership positions in corporate boards is, on global average, 25% too. Most countries have underperfo­rmed in the economic developmen­t of women as their economies are not structured to change and attain gender equality.

Violence against women has also continued to be a problem in South Africa and all over the world. This is an area where countries have engaged but not with required ambition.

As of September 2020, 155 countries had passed laws against domestic violence and140 countries had passed laws against sexual harassment in the workplace. But effective implementa­tion and allocation of resources required for the gender-based violence to be made history has fallen short. While we do acknowledg­e the significan­t progress in this area, it is not deep enough.

Targeted interventi­ons are required where we can use the lessons learnt in the past 25 years, hence the Generation Equality campaign. This global multi-stakeholde­r initiative, in which South Africa is also a part of leadership, intends to continue the unfinished business of the Beijing Platform for Action. And now, in addition, it will also fight the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, which is not only a health crisis but has proven to be an economic crisis as well.

This pandemic threatens to erode the modest gains that have been made since Beijing.

We must reconnect with Chief Albert Luthuli and his legacy - and that of his strong wife, Nokukhanya, who was strategic and skilled in her own way.

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 ?? | AYANDA NDAMANE African News Agency (ANA) ?? RURAL women march to Parliament in Cape Town during October. More needs to be done to empower women globally, says the writer.
| AYANDA NDAMANE African News Agency (ANA) RURAL women march to Parliament in Cape Town during October. More needs to be done to empower women globally, says the writer.
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