The status quo at the moment is that a number of SADC countries have acceded to many international and regional conventions and protocols that facilitate the rights of young women. What SADC should actually be doing is adopting mechanisms that accelerate gender equality as countries are already failing to achieve them. In a report released on the sidelines of the SADC Heads of State Summit, Gender Links, an organisation that spearheads efforts to promote gender equality said governments in the region were not doing enough. With only five years to go for governments to meet the 28 targets in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Protocol on Gender and Development, activists have given a 54% progress rating, down one percent from a baseline study last year. Country scores ranged from 79% in Namibia to 38% in Zimbabwe. Now with this in mind another protocol will not make countries achieve the set goals but action is ideally important.
It is also important for us to realise that a protocol is in fact just a set of guidelines or rules. Yes the countries might have come to an agreement but it is not automatic that anything will be done about it or implementation may be very slow. The problem that lies is that African countries are failing to implement policies and something has to be done about that. One way of doing it is to put pressure on governments underlying social, economic, political and healthcare issues that contribute to dismal states of young women in these countries today. To accelerate gender equality and make sure both young women and older women’s rights are recognised and observed there is a need to encourage nations to have a strong political will to actually want to achieve these goals that they have set out. The lack of political will is apparent because countries like to blame technicalities in their countries for them not to even sign any treaties. States are seemingly unwilling to protect women to the extent required by these protocols. This shows that African nations do not have the will to actually be bound to observing the rights of women and to tying themselves up to obligations with women that it may have set out. This is ideally a problem that having another protocol will not solve. A cultivation of the mentality and deep set thinking for example within the political parties in a country is the one of the things that will solve this inherent lack of political will. Governing parties should want to bring about a change then all the policies will be made with the gender sensitivity that is required.
val chishamiso says
Thursday 14 July 2011
Wednesday 11 May 2011
Status of young women in southern africa
>We can agree that for some of us when we ask ourselves what is women empowerment? The answer that quickly rushes to mind is how we actually measure levels of women empowerment in our mindsets. We begin to ask ourselves how many women occupy seats in Parliament. Another measure would be whether the status of women in marriages has been elevated, are they not facing any cultural injustices that culminate in abuse from their in-laws and have appropriate legal and administrative rights been put in place to ensure that women are treated as equal partners in marriage and other statistics of that nature. We can clearly note that the needs of these women are different from the average 40 or 50 year old woman but this has not been taken into consideration. Why am I saying this, at the same time when all these things are happening and women are climbing up the political ladder slowly things like rape of young women are still on the increase, not enough young girls are getting proper access to sanitary wear, young girls are unemployed they are being taken advantage of their bad situations and being abused and trafficked from one place to another. Most of them are not going to school and all their voices are seemingly silent cries hence the need for regulatory set of rules that focuses particularly on making sure the rights of young women particularly are observed
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