Promoting peace through women’s leadership and political participation: evidence from the Sahel

The rationale for the participation of women in peace and development in Africa is undeniable. In fact, there is emerging evidence and increased recognition of how intergenerational women leaders are shaping the continent and promoting a culture of peace, particularly in fragile settings.

 

In the Sahel, a vast, semi-arid region spanning over 10 countries and serving as a border between North Africa and the tropical regions in the south, women play a pivotal role in the economy, making up nearly 80 percent of the Sahel’s agricultural workforce[1] as well as leading the informal sector. However, Sahelian women are often extremely marginalized.

 

Laws and policies that regulate formal institutions, as well as gender-related socio-cultural norms in the informal sector, continue to limit women’s power of self-determination in the economic and political scene. Socio-cultural factors hinder the equitable participation of women in leadership positions and positions of authority in their communities.

 

Women in the Sahel are often victims of discriminatory cultural practices and beliefs that further reinforce existing gender inequalities. They also frequently contend with gender-based violence at home, including forced marriages, physical and sexual violence or sexual exploitation.

 

Women are excluded from education and literacy, with their roles reduced or confined to domestic responsibilities. In Mali and Burkina Faso, it is estimated that one out of every three women has never attended school or attended for just one year.[2] The low numbers of women enrolled in secondary education, compared to men, further deepens the gender gap in higher levels of education. As a result, the proportion of women in decision-making roles remains severely limited.

 

These inequalities have further been compounded by natural and anthropogenic crises. Climate change, for instance, is a growing threat to farming activities with the loss of financial income, especially for women in the sector. Repeated shocks, including droughts and floods, have led to disruption of livelihoods.

 

For decades, the Sahel region has served as a battleground for surrounding conflicts and is currently afflicted by terrorism and violent extremism. Girls and young women are particularly hard hit in such crises. Pervasive violence has destroyed schools and made attendance unsafe, stripping adolescent girls of their basic rights and freedoms.

 

The situation has led to mass displacement — Central Sahel has recorded one of the fastest growing displacement crises, with almost 2 million internally displaced people (IDPs) and 850,000 refugees fleeing across borders as they move from one conflict to another.[3]

 

In addition to the negative impact on health, livelihoods and food security, the region is now facing the additional challenge of COVID-19, which is placing pressure on already fragile health infrastructure and worsening the humanitarian emergency.

 

There is good news however, Sahelian women are forming groups and informal networks at local and national levels to increase their voice in national debates and create space for political participation. This resilience building in defiance of the conflict and political instability has been possible through an innovative 3-month project titled “Building an Inclusive Post COVID-19 Recovery, Crises Transitions and Governance Reforms in the Sahel and Côte d’Ivoire-Phase I”.

 

Implemented by the West Africa Network for Peacebuilding (WANEP) in partnership with the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and UNDP, this initiative works in Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger and Cote d’Ivoire to advocate for responsible citizen-state relationships and increased participation in governance systems at the local and national levels.

 

Tapping into existing women’s networks, four National Women Coalitions (NWC), each represented by 30 leaders, were formed across the four countries to advocate for the inclusive participation of Sahelian women in political processes at all levels.

 

Women of all ages are coming together to bridge the intergenerational gap and collectively work towards tackling issues affecting their peace and security. 11 collaborative platforms were created by the NWCs to provide young women and girls with the opportunity to leverage the expertise and experiences of older women.

 

As one young woman from Niger emphasized: “I’ve worked alongside smart, older women fighters and I’m going to follow in their footsteps so that I can do what they do, if not more.” Marie Chitou, Niger

 

Bridging the intergenerational gap is fundamental to strategically engaging with younger generations, who make up approximately 60 percent of the total population across the continent. Young people are increasingly playing a larger role in their communities. Thus, a deliberate effort was made to ensure the 120 women leaders selected for the NWCs represented an intergenerational mix across urban and rural areas.

 

Reflecting on this strategy, Raaya Issoufou Nadia, a youth leader from Niger, “This is the first time I was being treated this well, there was no difference between us and the older women. I felt like I had my place in the process and that we (young and old alike) were of equal worth.”

 

Thanks to the project, over 120 women from the NWCs have been empowered with the relevant skills to successfully engage key stakeholders, including state actors and traditional and community authorities, to secure commitments for women’s inclusion in governance structures.

 

Collaborative platforms between NWCs and community women’s groups have also contributed to amplifying their voices in governance, peace and security discourse. Building on this momentum, phase 2 of the UNDP-WANEP-ECOWAS project was launched in November 2021 to consolidate on the gains from phase 1.

 

A key initiative of this new phase is the introduction of the Women Influencers Portal (WIP), which will allow the Women Coalitions to assess and evaluate their work and track progress on women, peace and security (WPS) reporting in line with the Continental Results Framework (CRF) pillars. Phase 2 will also focus on broadening inclusive approaches to WPS planning, implementation and assessment by fostering collaborative platforms between state and non-state actors as well as strengthening systems for inclusive women’s psychosocial and economic recovery.

 

Intergenerational women leadership can be instrumental in sustaining peace in the Sahel. Despite the challenges faced in the region, women are increasingly showing determination and commitment to act towards enabling peace and protecting their communities.

 

 

 

Source: UN Development Programme

UNHCR Sudan Operational Update, February 2022

Sudan hosts 1.12 million refugees and more than 3 million internally displaced persons. Recently, it saw new displacements from Ethiopia, South Sudan and within Sudan.

 

UNHCR and partners continue responding to the needs of about 51,000 Ethiopian refugees in East Sudan and 9,200 Ethiopian asylum-seekers in Blue Nile State.

 

UNHCR supports solutions for IDPs and South Sudanese refugees, such as voluntary return, legal work, self-reliance or resettlement.

 

Update on Achievements

 

Operational Context

 

Sudan hosts one of the largest refugee populations in Africa. South Sudanese make up the majority. Many others fled violence and persecution in neighbouring countries, including Eritrea, Central African Republic,

Ethiopia, and Chad. Wars in Syria and Yemen also pushed people to seek safety in the country.

Most refugees live in out-of-camp settlements, host communities and urban areas (61%), while others (39%) stay in 26 camps and many more settlements.

The country also counts more than 3 million internally displaced persons (IDPs), mostly in the Darfur region that has suffered from a volatile security situation for almost two decades. Together with the Sudanese Government, UNHCR ensures international protection and delivery of multisectoral assistance to displaced people in need in the Darfur region.

 

Highlights

 

Emergency Refugee Response in Eastern Sudan

 

The number of new arrivals from Ethiopia decreased almost by half (48%) in February compared to the previous month, with 65 new arrivals reported in Hamdayet (36) and Babikri (29). UNHCR teams at the border have received consistent reports from refugees that border crossing points have been blocked on the Ethiopian side, impeding the crossing of refugees and asylum seekers into Sudan.

 

UNHCR and COR scaled up the issuance of ID cards, providing over 3,300 ID cards to registered refugees aged 16 and above. This brings the total number of refugees with ID cards to 14,152 in Um Rakuba (7,350) and Tunaydbah (6,802), covering over 50% of the population in both camps.

 

The gender-based violence (GBV) sub-working group launched the inter-agency GBV action plan for the first quarter of 2022. In tandem, UNHCR and UNFPA initiated the rollout of the GBV Information Management System (GBVIMS) tool to harmonize GBV data collection and case management.

 

Preparedness efforts for the rainy season at household and camp levels are ongoing, in collaboration with local authorities and partners. An inter-agency rainy season preparedness plan has been created and efforts are underway to procure and distribute emergency shelter kits and pre-disaster kits to refugees in Babikri, Tunaydbah and Um Rakuba. Furthermore, arrangements are being made to initiate the rehabilitation of access roads as well as internal roads and the drainage system, particularly in Babikri and Tunaydbah.

 

UNHCR and UNDP established a Solution Working Group to increase the resilience of local communities affected by the refugee crisis and foster peace coexistence, in alignment with State and local development plans.

 

 

Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees

Syria: New anti-torture law “whitewashes” decades of human rights violations [EN/AR]

Responding to the news that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has enacted a new anti-torture law that fails to address a decade of torture, ill-treatment and extrajudicial executions carried out by Syria’s security forces, Lynn Maalouf, Amnesty International’s Deputy Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa, said:

 

“While we welcome any legislative steps towards complying with internationally recognized anti-torture conventions, the new law effectively whitewashes decades of state-sanctioned human rights violations.

 

“It fails to offer redress to past victims of torture, include any protection measures for witnesses or survivors of torture, nor does it state whether torture survivors, or in the event of their death, their families would receive compensation. Crucially, it fails to mention any measures that could be taken to prevent torture from occurring in detention centres and prisons in the future.”

 

“Amnesty International calls on the Syrian authorities to urgently allow independent monitors to access the country’s notorious detention centres – where torture leading to death has been taking place at a mass scale for years – as a first step to signalling any genuine intent to curtail the practice of torture by state agents. Furthermore, the anti-torture law must align with international human rights law – and that means as a first step, ensuring that the perpetrators of torture, cruel, inhuman or other ill-treatment face justice in fair trials before ordinary civilian courts and without recourse to death penalty.”

 

Background

 

The anti-torture law was enacted by Presidential Decree on 30 March after being discussed in Syria’s parliament for the first time on 28 March.

 

Amnesty International has previously documented inhuman conditions across Syria’s prisons. The widespread and systematic use of enforced disappearance, torture and other ill-treatment, which has led to deaths in detention, and extrajudicial executions following sham trials, amount to crimes against humanity.

 

 

Source: Amnesty International

DRC: Conviction of 13 youth activists is a shameful act to suppress dissent

Today’s conviction of 13 activists from the citizen movement Lutte pour le Changement (LUCHA) by a military court in Beni is a shameful attempt to silence critical voices, said Amnesty International.

The activists – who have already been held arbitrarily for five months – were sentenced to a further 12 months in prison for their participation in a peaceful demonstration in November last year.

“The conviction of these 13 activists simply for having exercised their right to freedom of peaceful assembly is another shameful attempt to suppress dissent in DRC,” said Flavia Mwangovya, Amnesty International’s Deputy Director for East Africa, the Horn and the Great Lakes Region.

“The sentence must be quashed, and these activists must be immediately and unconditionally released. Congolese authorities should address these activists’ legitimate demands for effective protection of civilians in the conflict, instead of preventing them from speaking out.

“President Tshisekedi must lift abusive restrictions on civic space under the pretext of the state of siege, and completely revoke the power given to military courts to judge civilians, in accordance with international human rights standards.”

Background:

The 13 Lucha activists were arrested on 11 November 2021 in Beni during a peaceful protest to denounce the authorities’ failure to protect civilians against deadly attacks by armed groups, despite the ongoing state of siege.

They have been arbitrarily detained since November 2021, with at least three of them falling seriously ill due to the trauma of their brutal arrest and poor prison conditions. They have not received appropriate medical attention. The 13 activists were accused of “provocation to disobey the laws” and faced three years in prison.

President Félix Tshisekedi declared a ‘state of siege’ in North-Kivu and Ituri provinces in May 2021 with the declared aim of reducing attacks on civilians. However, the implementation has resulted in flagrant human rights violations, including the transfer of political and administrative powers to the military and police, a blanket ban on protests, and the transfer of criminal jurisdiction over civilians to military courts. All of these constitute a violation of the Congolese Constitution, the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which the DRC is a party.

Amnesty International has documented dozens of cases of arbitrary arrests and unlawful detention of peaceful activists, journalists, and at least three provincial MPs in the two provinces since May 2021.

 

 

Source: Amnesty International

Media 2022 Accreditation Fees set

The Zimbabwe Media Commission (ZMC) with the approval of the Minister of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services has set the 2022 media accreditation fees.

 

The new fees are stipulated in terms of Statutory Instrument 65 of 2022, which sets the fees in United States Dollars.

 

An explanatory note states that the fees for local mass media services and accreditation of local journalists are payable in local currency using the foreign exchange inter-bank rate of the day.

 

This means that accreditation fees for foreign journalists and foreign mass media service or news agency is only payable in United States dollars.

 

The accreditation fees for local journalists working for local media houses has been set at USD20,00 for first time applicants, USD15,00 for renewal of accreditation and USD10,00 for replacement of lost card.

 

Local journalists working for foreign media houses are being charged USD50,00 application fee and USD150,00 for either accreditation or renewal of accreditation.

 

MISA Zimbabwe position

 

MISA Zimbabwe welcomes the setting of new fees which were already long overdue in view of the press statement that was released by the Commission in early January this year indicating that new fees would be set.

 

This lengthy period of operating with expired accreditation cards places journalists at the risk of being arrested by the police as has been noted through previous experiences and trends.

 

MISA Zimbabwe however, notes that the accreditation fees for local journalists working for foreign media houses are exorbitant and beyond the reach of many.

 

The fees for local journalists working for foreign media houses are of concern as USD150,00 for accreditation is unreasonable given the realities of the income levels of media practitioners.

 

These fees are prohibitory in nature and may result in local journalists working for foreign media houses not being able to be accredited at all.

 

It is the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights’ position that onerous conditions of accreditation are akin to censorship and endanger the right to receive and impart information.

 

Further, considering how long it took the Commission to have these accreditation fees gazetted, a situation that was also experienced in 2021, the ZMC and the Ministry of Information, should consider a framework that provides for two – five-year accreditation terms.

 

The issue of the decentralisation of the Commission is still a key gap that needs to be addressed as journalists continue to find it difficult, not only to meet the expensive costs of accreditation, but also the costs of travelling.

 

This statutory instrument is also purportedly enacted in terms of Section 91 of the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), which Section gives regulatory powers to the Minister.

 

The ZMC is the institution that regulates the media industry in fulfillment of its constitutional mandate.

 

Further, AIPPA was also unbundled, repealed and replaced through the enactment of the Freedom of Information Act, the Data Protection Act and the Zimbabwe Media Commission Act.

 

This also presents an opportunity for the ZMC and the Ministry of Information to ensure that there is harmonisation of laws.

 

 

Source: Promoting Free Expression in South Africa

Ten (10) unlawful gold dealers sentenced

LIMPOPO – The Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation welcome the sentencing of ten (10) unlawful gold dealers by the Giyani Magistrate’s Court on Friday,  1 April 2022.

Mpatise Tshuma(29), Decent Ngwenya (22), Lamulani Sibanda (31), Skhumbuzo Mkandla (21), Ocean Mpofu (28), Prince Ndlovu (27), Brandon Nyoni (22), Clive Moyo (29), Tawanda Ndebele (33) and Philani Ndlovu (33) who are all Zimbabwean nationals were arrested by the Hawks’ Serious Organised Crime Investigation members  assisted by Giyani Police and Local Criminal Record Centre members on 14 May 2021.

The Hawks received a tip off about people who were enroute from Phalaborwa to Giyani to sell gold.

The vehicle matching a description of the one they were travelling in was spotted driving on the R81 road near Giyani shopping complex and it was cornered.

Ten occupants were found in the vehicle and they were searched. Upon searching them, unwrought gold, pastel, scale and mine detectors worth over R900 000-00 as well as R3800-00 cash were found and seized.

The accused appeared several times in the Giyani Magistrate’s Court, and subsequently pleaded guilty to the charges.

The court sentenced them to two (2) years imprisonment for contravention of the Precious Metal Act of which one year is suspended and six months imprisonment for contravening the Immigration Act. The sentences are to run concurrently

 

 

Source: South African Police Service

Six murder suspects to appear in court

POTCHEFSTROOM – Six men aged between 22 and 26 are expected to make their first appearance before the Vryburg Magistrates’ Court on Monday, 4 April 2022, for murder.

The suspects’ court appearance emanates from an incident in which the lifeless body of a 30-year-old Luckyboy Mereekae was found at the corner of Vry and De Kock Street with several stab wounds on Saturday morning, 2 April 2022.

According information at our disposal, the suspects were from a tavern outside Vryburg when they met Mereekae. Subsequent to a quarrel that ensued, the suspects allegedly took out knives and stabbed Mereekae several times on the body.

Preliminary investigations led the police to Huhudi Location where the six suspects were apprehended and weapons used to commit the offence confiscated. At this stage, the motive for the murder is still unknown and investigation into the matter continues.

The Provincial Commissioner of North West, Lieutenant General Sello Kwena condemned the incident and applauded Vryburg Detectives for acting swiftly in arresting the suspects.

 

 

 

Source: South African Police Service