Women and Elections
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| Election events |
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Gender activists are calling on the new South African government to improve the country’s gender legislation. Current gender policies focus on women, ignoring the rights, roles and responsibility of men and boys, they say. "Not a single political party has made gender equality part of their manifesto, let alone focused on how they might involve men and boys in achieving this," said Bafana Khumalo, co-director of the Sonke Gender Justice Network, an NGO working with boys and men. "This has to change with utmost urgency."
Women’sNet interviewed the new kid on the block, Women Forward (WF). The party Spokesperson, Sizile Ndlazi told us that the reason this political party was formed was because it had become very obvious that women’s issues were not being addressed. That since the President of Women Forward Ms Nana Ngobese-Nxumalo worked within government, it was evident that as much as there all these great policies in place for women empowerment the resources were not going where they should go and women were still being marginalized. Is Women Forward feminist? We asked and were told that the answer is a glaring no. A follow up to this question was: Is South Africa ready for a woman president, to which WF said this country has been through many things most of which a lot of people thought we were not ready for, so a woman for president is not a major thing, I mean we will not change the national flag to be pink, the only difference is that we will bring peace and harmony along.
South Africa. The incidence of such crimes in South Africa is both inordinately and
particularly high in comparison to many other parts of the world. Any political party
claiming to represent all of South Africa’s citizens must address such violence – unless
they wish to overlook half of the population. Responses to violence against women also
cannot be subsumed under responses to crime generally. Violence against women has
unique aspects which, if not recognised and dealt with appropriately, will merely
perpetuate the problem. Our review of the manifestoes therefore examines how parties
understand and frame the problem of violence against women and what they then
conceive of as being appropriate solutions to the problem.