Sunday, November 10, 2013

This article was contributed to UNDP to forster achievement of MDG 3



PROVIDING EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES AND UNLOCKING POTENTIAL FOR DEVELOPMENT
“Marginalization of and denial of many human rights to women is an injustice to more than half of humanity. There can be no peace and progress in such a world.”
-          Tom Odhiambo, Lecturer , University of Nairobi
For any country to achieve social, political and economic development, it must include each and every demographic section within itself. Often, marginalized constituencies find themselves on the peripheries of such progress in the affairs of their societies. Women are one such a group. They have been sidelined for far too long.
In this essay, I shall focus on promoting gender equality and women empowerment which is the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) Number Three (MDG3). I will highlight the success stories in gender issues and the challenges facing gender equality.
World over, gender is socially constructed. It is neither biological nor natural. We are taught roles and responsibilities then examined against a gender marking scheme.
Particularly in Kenya, patriarchy has crippled gender equality. When parents have limited finances, they prioritize boy child education and let the girl child to drop out of school and take care of the entire family. She will be subjected to endless household errands like washing dishes, cooking and fetching water on her tender back. All this time her brother continues to study, play and relax-shaping his destiny at the expense of that of the sister whose future is uncertain and bleak. The result is high levels of illiteracy and dependency among the girls and women on men. The latter become educated, secure better jobs and return to repress and oppress women.
 A girl who drops out of school is condemned to a dark future without any promise to look forward to. Fate conspires to have her married off early, sink deep into grinding poverty, effectively consigning her quality of life to go south. Do we want girls to have bright future? Why then do we give boys undue advantage over girls? Why do we tilt the playing ground for the boys at the expense of girls?
The society is very unforgiving to women and girls. It does not listen to them. It is a harsh and an unfair judge. It curses them like a sailor and condemns them like a demon. How else would you explain the name-calling and utter disrespect of female political aspirants? Not that they did not have education or their male rivals had better manifestos. Is it such a bulky baggage being a woman? Simply because she is a woman she will not sit with men in the high table to discuss and decide on matters politics. She cannot flex the financial muscle and pull a gubernatorial or a senatorial first. We have set her standards so low. We should not reserve and restrict ladies to the seats of mere MPs or Women Reps.
The straw that broke the camel’s back is the failure of women to use their own numbers to effect the changes they desire. They abandon one of their own. Mrs. Charity Ngilu tested the murky waters of presidential race for them in 1997. They gave her a wide berth like she had leprosy. In 2013, Ms Martha Karua ran an issue-based campaign. She portrayed herself as a no-nonsense iron lady, tough and serious. She was an embodiment of rule of law and a sure remedy for slaying the dragon of corruption and impunity. What happened? Did we just forget her too soon? Despite the sobriety and solemn silence of the ballot booth we were apathetic and gave her a cold shoulder.
Women have been ignored. They work as twice as hard as men in order to be recognized. This should not be so. They are sidelined at the resource allocation and distribution stages. Explain to me like a two year old since I wonder why she should not be entitled to inherit her family estate as her brother would. Tell me why when her husband dies she should be “ritual cleansed” by a brother -in -law. Then the shameless in-laws move in swiftly to scavenge whatever is left. These vultures peck the wife and the children completely ignoring the will of the deceased husband. I suppose he turns in his grave upon ‘seeing’ his wife’s property being grabbed and his children being turned to beggars by his very own relatives.
The best way to ensure gender equality and empowerment is to implement our new constitution faithfully to the letter and spirit. This most progressive constitution should make a positive difference after its promulgation. Gender equality articles 10(2) b, 27 (b), 56, 81(b), 100 (a), 97 and 98 should be implemented fully. Let us not just have an empty rhetoric of two-thirds gender principle. Rather, we should staff public offices-whether elective or appointive- with not more than two-thirds majority of either gender. We cannot afford to leave behind more than half of the population and purport to achieve any political, social or economic development.
Article 81(b)
“The electoral system shall comply with the following principles- not more than two thirds of the members of elective public bodies shall be of the same gender.– Constitution of Kenya
If Liberia gave us Mrs. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Malawi offered Ms. Joyce Banda, then Kenya can do better. If South Africa put forward Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma as the African Union Commission Chairperson surely we can pull a female first too.  I   am persuaded that there are many Martha Karuas, much more Wangari Maathais and even more highly potential and ready to serve Mekatilili wa Menzas looking for a chance to show their mettle. Unlocking the potential of girls and women will propel Kenya where it dreams to be: first world.
The Kenyan girl has endured too much of rape, female genital mutilation, early and forced marriage, abject poverty and not forgetting illiteracy. She needs to be wiped tears off her beautiful face. Who will make her smile?
Each of us has a noble responsibility to put a beaming smile on the face of the African lady. Appreciate her. Care for her. Treat her with respect and restore her dignity. Love her. That is not too much to ask.
I dare say girls and women do not need anyone’s favour. They are up to the task. All they need is equal chances as men. In this regard I salute the government for availing Women Enterprise Fund. I just hope that the Uwezo Fund rolled out to empower the women, youths and the disabled will truly give them uwezo (ability). I desire to see female entrepreneurial youth supplying the government with lucrative contracts and creating jobs for themselves and others. The 30 per cent allocation of procurement services to this constituency is a major plus to emancipation of the neglected and vulnerable.
When we have put in place the best policies we can conceive, let’s turn to the cradle of gender inequality which is the mind. When one is diagnosed with cancer the malignant cells are isolated and powerfully radiated. Our brains have gender cancer. Yes! You read it right. We have a deadly tumour of rigid mindsets and attitudes which need to be shifted. Civic education will demystify that gender issues are not exclusively women issues but our issues-all of us as a society; men and women, boys and girls. Proper debunking of gender myths and stereotypes will make us get rid of retrogressive cultural practices which have held back our girls and women from being part of our nation’s development. Men are not superior to women. They are equal. Feminist movements have set the tone that no one will give women their rights on silver platter. Instead, they should fight for them. I can’t help but join the fight for gender equality and empowerment of women. Will you? I hope so!
“Over time, I have become aware that as a woman, no one will improve you, head hunt you or ask you to join in. You have to take all the initiatives and demonstrate your value. There is no silver platter for women. Be stubborn, know what you want and do not give up.”
-Asa Torkelsson, Senior Gender Specialist at the World Bank- Kenya.

The writer studies Bachelor of Arts degree in Communication and Media at Chuka University. He blogs at musyokangui.blogspot.com

No comments:

Post a Comment