NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Women need to actively participat­e in politics guest

- Fadzayi Mahere Fadzayi Mahere is an advocate at the High Court of Zimbabwe and spokespers­on for the Citizens Coalition for Change party.

IT is fair to say there has been reasonable progress for women in political leadership and decision-making in the past three decades. Yet, 27 years after the Beijing declaratio­n at the world conference on women, adopted by 189 countries and seen as the key moment for radical change in gender equality, too much remains the same.

Since 2015, women in almost every country have had the right to vote, at least in theory. The world has seen impressive female leaders including Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (Liberia), Mia Mottley (Barbados), Angela Merkel (Germany) and Jacinda Ardern. A few countries, such as Finland, even have Cabinets dominated by women. These achievemen­ts have in large part happened because of measures invoked since the Beijing conference.

However, there has been very slow progress in other areas. In Zimbabwe, women remain under-represente­d in party politics, in Parliament and in Cabinet.

Deep-seated patriarcha­l and political violence are sustained by legacies of masculinis­ed nationalis­t politics that helped liberate Zimbabwe from equally patriarcha­l colonial rule. Masculinis­ed nationalis­m found powerful expression through Zanu PF, the ruling party for more than four decades.

Women make up less than 50% of parliament­arians, yet gender parity is a constituti­onal requiremen­t. Since independen­ce in 1980, there has not been a female president. The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission only registered five female voters in one of the country’s biggest provinces, Mashonalan­d Central last year. Women are excluded from political processes, to the detriment of society.

The mere fact of being a woman does not give one the right to lead. Both men and women must be held to the same standards of non-patriarcha­l values, integrity, accountabi­lity, transparen­cy; these are all key components of ethical leadership, regardless of gender. We should focus on choosing leaders who connect with people, drive positive social change, focus on uplifting their communitie­s.

In my journey as a relatively young woman in politics, I have observed and experience­d prejudices and stereotype­s. Sometimes, when I open my mouth to speak, instead of engaging with the content, my audience will ask: “But why aren’t you married?” Instead of taking issue with the government and fighting the system, I’m told I should get married and have children. Some sexualise my appearance and, rather than focus on the substance of a Press conference, comment on my face or hair. Then there is cyberbully­ing, trolling and fake news.

Opponents mount disinforma­tion campaigns that are easily sexualised in the political context.

I deal with it by choosing not to be a victim. I am not the sort of politician who sings everyday about how everything is so unfair. I focus on what I can control: my competence and my delivery. It takes time to gain public trust. But once people see you as a leader of integrity — that you are transparen­t, accountabl­e and prepared to accept criticism with a measure of humility — they start to see beyond gender.

One of the main things to help increase women’s democratic participat­ion is seeing other women in leadership – the role-model effect. Women comprise an embarrassi­ngly low 14% of councillor­s in Zimbabwe. This lack of representa­tion can lead to apathy, as women fail to see themselves represente­d. Having women stand as examples of public leadership and investing in the next generation of female leaders creates models in the public imaginatio­n and pushes more women to get involved. It builds courage.

I remain optimistic about the future of Zimbabwe. Despite the present challenges of patriarchy, poverty and corruption, it is a country with all the ingredient­s of success. But people, women especially, must register to vote. When the election comes in 2023, they must elect non-patriarcha­l women and men to address the gender disparitie­s in Zimbabwe’s political, social and economic realms.

Apathy aids the patriarcha­l, anti-people status quo. Voting is the most powerful non-violent tool we have in bringing an end to dictatorsh­ip and achieve change for Zimbabwe.

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