Renewed Energy for Women’s Empowerment

Interview with head of UN Women in Southern Africa

By Ernest Harsch (Africa Renewal)
12:57 PM, January 23, 2014

Nomcebo Manzini is a busy woman. As the regional director for southern Africa and the Indian Ocean islands of the UN’s recently created Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women – officially known as UN Women – she is constantly on the road from one country to another, addressing public gatherings, attending conferences, and strategizing with government officials and women activists alike. Africa Renewal’s managing editor, Ernest Harsch, was fortunate to catch Ms. Manzini at her home in Johannesburg, South Africa, in late March 2011, during a brief stopover in her travels.

Harsch: In South Africa and Mozambique, women have reached the benchmark of 30 percent women’s representation in parliament. What’s the picture across southern Africa?

Manzini: As a sub-region we certainly have a long way to go. A few countries have been doing well, but there are others that have regressed. In terms of women in political leadership positions, the average is only 18 percent. It is way below the 30 percent level we have been calling for, and far below the 50 cent level that the heads of state and government agreed to in signing the Gender and Development Protocol [of the Southern African Development Community – SADC]. We are seeing a lot of change at the local level. Most countries seem to be doing much better in terms of representation in local governments. This might be because women work in the community and are better known at that level.
Women’s political representation is absolutely important because participation is a basic human right. Women bring their experiences, knowledge, and capacities, which are different from those that men bring.

Beyond getting into office, how can women better engage with broader governance issues, including political conflicts?

One of the things that UN Women is doing is building capacities for women to participate in leadership, but transformative leadership, so that they can engage from a perspective of basic human rights and understand broader governance issues and democracy in general. Some countries are in deep conflict. Our position is to support women to participate in negotiations, in mediation, but also in prevention. In Comoros, for instance, we are working within the context of the UN country team on a peacebuilding project. Our contribution is to build the skills of women to understand the issues of gender relations in peace, in peacebuilding, even in conflicts and how conflicts happen. Even if they understand that, they need to build allies within the traditional leaderships, among men, with their partners, etc. We try to engage a more holistic approach to dealing with such issues.

Photo: Johanna Paillet/flickr
Photo: Johanna Paillet/flickr

UN Women coordinates the Africa Unite campaign, which targets violence against women and girls. What is the main challenge?

The problem is the resources. We are not getting enough funds from national budgets or from the donor community. African heads of state launched the campaign in Africa in January 2010. We are now doing advocacy with the different heads of state to ensure that their ministries of planning and finance allocate funds for implementing the national action plans.
We have safer cities programs that we will be rolling out in several countries in cooperation with UNICEF. Research shows that rape of young girls is normally of school children in the early morning when they are going to school, and in the evening when they are going back home, often through thick bushes and other unsafe pathways. But when we talk to governments about this, they hardly have the resources to provide sanitation and water to communities. They do not see it as a priority.

And the judicial and security systems?

We are working with the police, military, and other entities in the security sector to make sure they understand the gender dimensions of policing and security, also gender-based violence. We had a conference to talk about how we can support the SADC gender unit to mainstream gender in the SADC Organ on Politics, Defence, and Security. We talked about ensuring that the officers who go on peacekeeping missions have some gender training.
We are also looking at the informal justice sector. In southern Africa, research clearly shows that when women experience abuse or violence in the home, they do not go to the police as a first port of call. They go either to their families or to traditional leadership.

There has been real progress in narrowing the gap between boys and girls entering primary school. But do the girls stay in school?

That is a fundamental point. Looking at many countries, we find that there is parity in terms of entry. In some countries, girls are even surpassing boys in entering basic education. But as you move further into the school years and you get into grades seven and eight, there are fewer girls continuing in school. Parents are more likely to withdraw the girls from school if they are cash-strapped – or if the girls are going to get married. The other problem is that pregnancy in schools is very high and girls will drop out to have the babies. Girls also tend to have more work to do in the home, so they have less time to study and therefore tend to have a lower passing rate than the boys.

 
Photo: UN Photo/Christopher Herwig
Photo: UN Photo/Christopher Herwig

Southern Africa has the highest HIV prevalence rates in the world. How are women affected?

So much money has come through for programs against HIV and AIDS. But the work has not taken into account the clear connection between gender inequality and the spread of HIV/AIDS. In some southern African countries, there are 5 percent of men with HIV, but you find 20 to 22 percent of young women of the same age group with HIV.
When you do the research, it is very much: “I didn’t want to sleep with him, but he forced me.” And then there is the whole issue of “survival sex” in southern Africa, where young girls will sleep with older men so that they are able to go to school.

And women are also more likely than men to be in poverty…

It seems as though even our governments have now acknowledged that development is not going to happen without the full involvement and participation of women in the economy. But they have not just all of a sudden become benevolent. It is because of the advocacy that has been coming from the women’s movements and from the ministries responsible for women and gender issues.
At UN Women we are working with five governments in the sub-region in a pilot program to see exactly what women are doing to get out of poverty. Most of these women are in what is called the informal sector, and their work is not recognized. The women who kept the Zimbabwe economy going at the lowest point in its history are not recognized even today. Yet, they ensured the survival of their families and the economy.
It is absolutely essential to deal with the economic empowerment of women, because we know that when women have that economic independence, they are more likely to be able to make decisions about their dignity, their security, and their welfare.

Does UN Women work with rural women?

We are currently looking to raise $33 million in funds for a project to do exactly that, to work with rural women, particularly rural women farmers. It is a major challenge. At least 70 percent of the labor in agriculture is provided by women. When we seek $33 million, that is a drop in the ocean really – it is nothing in terms of the need. And what happens when the $33 million is gone? We need to be able to define programs that governments include in their own national development plans. And governments must be able to desist from corruption. It is not that the national resources are not there, but they are misused.

UN Women has just been created, merging four different UN entities that dealt with women. For women here in southern Africa, what difference can UN Women make?

What I see already is just an amazing amount of renewed energy for women’s empowerment in the various areas of work since the creation of UN Women – renewed hope indeed that UN Women will do things better and faster in promoting women’s rights globally. It is a very tough call for us in UN Women to deliver on that.

 
 
 
Photo: Africa Renewal/Ernest Harsch
Photo: Africa Renewal/Ernest Harsch

“Women’s political representation is absolutely important,” says Nomcebo Manzini, head of UN Women for Southern Africa.

This interview was originally published in Africa Renewal, Special Edition on Women 2012, produced by the Africa Section of the United Nations Department of Public Information

 
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