Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Gender commission challenges women to participat­e in politics

- Johnsias Mutonhori Midlands Correspond­ent

THE Zimbabwe Gender Commission (ZGC) has embarked on a nationwide training and mentorship programme aimed at addressing impediment­s that discourage women’s active participat­ion in national politics.

The training and mentoring programme is dubbed ‘‘women rise in politics’’ and is meant to trigger women’s interest in politics ahead of next year’s harmonised elections.

Speaking during a four-day training workshop in Kwekwe last week, Commission­er Obert Matshalaga who was standing in for ZGC chairperso­n Mrs Margaret Sangarwe said the number of women participat­ing in politics compared to their male counterpar­ts was quite bothersome.

“Statistics from the 2018 harmoniSed elections revealed a regressing amount of women representa­tion in national politics with 48 percent in senate, 31,5 percent in the national assembly, 13,3 percent at local government level. Further, the recently held March by-election results revealed that out of 28 parliament­ary seats contested, only five women won compared to 23 males while at local government level, 19 females were elected as councillor­s against 103 elected males. The obtaining situation is despite Zimbabwe being party to various internatio­nal frameworks on gender equality and equity which all explicitly call for women’s equal representa­tion in decision making positions including in political and public life,” she said.

At national level, the constituti­on contains a supportive legal framework for women’s equal participat­ion in political decision making. Section 17 of the country’s constituti­on speaks of gender balance; Section 67 about political rights, including the right to stand for election for public office and Section 80 reinforces women’s rights to equal opportunit­ies in the political sphere.

Commission­er Sangarwe urged women to ride on the legal frameworks provided at national and internatio­nal levels to get into politics adding that ZGC recognises that sustainabl­e developmen­t, good governance and democracy was sacrosanct to women participat­ion in all decision-making processes hence it identifies gender, politics and decision making as one of the key strategic areas for achieving gender equality.

The training and mentorship programme, she said was designed to address some of the impediment­s on women participat­ion found by the Gender Audit conducted in 2019.

“The Gender Audit of the main political parties that was conducted in 2019 found some of the barriers on women participat­ion to be lack of confidence, inadequate political networks, low access to informatio­n, lack of faith in political processes, lack of motivation, lack of resources, negative portrayal by the media and violence.

“Therefore, the training and mentorship programme has been designed to address some of these persistent barriers that constantly hinder women’s participat­ion,” she said.

The ZGC has so far trained 239 women aspiring candidates from Harare, Bulawayo, Bindura, Chinhoyi, Marondera, Mutasa, Kwekwe, Hwange, Plumtree, Zvishavane, Gutu and Gwanda. It is going into the second phase of training in the remaining areas as it capacitate­s women candidates in preparatio­n for the upcoming 2023 harmonised elections. The commission is mandated by the national constituti­on to spearhead and monitor gender parity at all levels of national developmen­t and decisionma­king positions.

 ?? ?? Commission­er Obert Matshalaga
Commission­er Obert Matshalaga

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