The Citizen (KZN)

‘Give disabled a voice’

TELLING OFF: PAN-AFRICAN PARLIAMENT TAKEN TO TASK ON REPRESENTA­TION

- Eric Naki ericn@citizen.co.za

ANC chief whip takes aim at African ruling body for too few women in structures.

ANC chief whip Pemmy Majodina has taken the fight for the women and disabled people to the highest level on the African continent – telling the Pan-African Parliament (PAP) to walk the talk and improve on its poor representa­tion of people with disabiliti­es, and of women, on its structures.

Majodina challenged the PAP to observe the provisions of article 4 (2) of the Protocol to the Treaty Establishi­ng the African Economic Community relating to the PAP, which states that each state shall be represente­d by five members, with at least one of them being a woman.

She said the parliament must set aside a day of accountabi­lity to check on the progress made in the ratificati­on of the AU protocol pertaining to human and rights of people with disabiliti­es in the continent.

“I am deeply concerned that as Africans, we seem to be good in talking and crafting good laws and policies, but drag out feet in the implementa­tion of those laws and policies.

“It is high time that we begin to walk the talk. We must ensure that our countries’ next delegation­s to the PAP include a person with a disability.”

Majodina highlighte­d that the PAP structures such as its bureaux had only one woman (out of the five), with the bureaux of committees, the leaders of country delegation­s and regional caucuses all dominated by men.

“Even within the PAP staff and officials from our national parliament­s, there are no staff members or officials with disabiliti­es.

“We must respect people with disabiliti­es and do nothing about [them] without [them],” she said.

Majodina’s call came as Africa was identified as one continent still behind when it came to female representa­tion and promotion of people with disabiliti­es within the states’ respective public institutio­ns.

However, progress had been made in some areas, including the elections of Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma as the first female chairperso­n of the Africa Union Commission until her term ended in January 2017.

Dlamini-Zuma contested and lost against President Cyril Ramaphosa for the ANC presidency, a precursor towards becoming the country’s president.

Besides the current president of Ethiopia, Sahle-Work Zewde, other female former African presidents included Liberia’s then Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Joyce Banda of Malawi and Ameenah Gurib-Fakim of Mauritius. There had been a string of female acting presidents at several African states.

Majodina, who was speaking during the debate of the PAP’s committee on gender, family, youth and people with disability’s report on the Draft Model Disability Law, called for concrete action by PAP. She said the parliament must set aside a day of accountabi­lity to check on the progress made in the ratificati­on of the AU protocol on rights and disabiliti­es.

Only five AU members states, out of 55 have signed the protocol but none have ratified it yet. Those who signed are Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Gabon, South Africa and Togo. South Africa ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with disabiliti­es in 2007 and has embarked on a structured process to embed the obligation­s in law and policies.

Former minister of justice Michael Masutha is partially blind while Deputy Minister of Social Developmen­t Hendrietta Bogopane-Zulu is also partially blind. –

Ex minministe­r, current deputy are blind.

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