Statement by the South African Foreign
Minister, Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma at the Femmes Africa Solidarite Consultation, Dakar,
Senegal, 19 June 2001
Chairperson
Honourable Minister of Social Welfare and National Solidarity
Representatives from the Organisation of African Unity
Honourable Ministers
Distinguished Delegates
Ladies and Gentlemen
I would like to start by extending my
heartfelt thanks to you for inviting me to address you on a topic which is not only close
to my heart, but which I believe is one of the most important keys to our future on the
continent. I would also like to express my appreciation for the warm hospitality extended
to my delegation. The Government and the people of Senegal who are hosting this meeting,
for the warm hospitality extended to me and my delegation since arrival.
The women in our ancient societies wielded
a lot of power in the affairs of their communities, in both reproduction and production.
They were the custodians of our culture and language However, the power of women has been
eroded by the wave of colonialism which gradually undermined our culture, our values and
dispossessed us of the land in particular, with industrialisation women were marginalized
and discriminated against by the colonial administrations. They undermined women and
relegated their role to the kitchen so to say. They were left to produce children with no
proper means to bring them up.
The power was also eroded by the conflicts
and wars, which turned them into refugees. They became prey to preventable diseases. Women
on this continent constitute the bulk of the poor, the refugees, the sick including those
suffering from HIV/AIDs. Research shows that 80% of women who are infected are faithful to
their partners.
Young women are driven to prostitution and
sex slavery by grinding poverty. Women are missing, or are few and far below in decision
making bodies like government, parliament, the clergy, industry, academic institutions,
judiciary and sports, to mention a few.
As a result of all this, the women find
themselves as being the majority of the poor, the ill, the ignorant, they do not have
access to information or training and they are completely marginalized.
Women bear the brunt of all forms of
discrimination. Racism, racial discrimination, class discrimination, religious
discrimination, gender discrimination, xenophobia and all related intolerance more vicious
towards women.
Yet women are so crucial in all the matters
of transformation, in all the matters of the recovery of the continent. There can be no
African Recovery unless women are part of developing the plans, implementing the plan and
as beneficiaries of the plan.
Our continent needs the energy, the
creativity, the organisational skills and the patience of women. Women are more than half
of the population, they also produce and nurture the other half. Women are a critical and
valuable resource.
In terms of the Durban Conference, there is
international recognition that certain forms of racism, racial discrimination and
xenophobia are directed against women because of their gender. Examples include sexual
violence against women, during armed conflict, in detention and in refugee camps, the
forced sterilisation of indigenous women and trafficking of women and girls.
The situation of migrant women and women
and girls who had been trafficked have also been highlighted when the double-burden of
gender based and racial discrimination have been discussed.
Gender-based and racial discrimination
affects women in contexts, including in relation to domestic violence, the impact of
migration laws and in the context of the criminal justice system. With women being unable
to access the criminal justice system and being subject to discriminatory policing
practices, exacerbated by unsettled immigration status and fear of deportation, multiple
disadvantages are created.
Ladies and gentlemen, I am therefore very
glad that we are all to spend the next three days as women working out our positions and
contribution to the conference on racism, racial discrimination xenophobia and all related
intolerance. Without the strong voice of women, Durban will not have the desired outcome
and follow-up. Women are crucial, not only for the outcome, but more importantly for the
implementation of the programme of action.
The Senegalese poet and artist Mrs Annette
Mbaye Derneville said, "The central role of a woman in social life is a fact of
culture. She is the link, which holds together both the life of the family and of society.
She is the source of production and of the exchange of social and cultural values. By her
will alone she can be the source of change and of revolution or, on the other hand, she
can be responsible for stagnation and retreat."
This is very true, with the full
participation of women, the continent will indeed experience a social, cultural and
economic revolution. Without their participation, it will sink deeper and deeper into an
economic crisis, conflict and wars as we are experiencing it today.
Mobilisation of women make all this
relevant to their day to day lives, they are the power.
We all have a responsibility individually
collectively in making 21st century the African Century. We owe it to the future
generations and to those who liberated us. Of importance to us, it is the task that lies
ahead of continuing to deal with Draft Protocol to the African Charter on Human and
Peoples Right on the Right of Women in Africa. To this end the Ordinary Session of the
African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights in Tripoli, Libya met for two weeks of
deliberations on broad human rights issues, especially rating to Africa. The NGO
Declaration that was adopted at the above conference, which states amongst others, the
internal and cross border conflicts, refugees, internally displaced persons, poverty etc.
points to the seriousness of this matter. This is a step in the right direction as we work
towards the Protocol on Rights of Women.
We are truly of this continent and with no
other home but Africa, we know that through our collective efforts, women, men and
children, we will win. We know that the continent has had its set backs, but we also know
it to be true that the continent is slowly slouching towards her rebirth.
The success of the African Renaissance is
intrinsically interwoven with the emancipation of African women. This is an African
century, it is a hundred years in which the African woman has to be in the front line of
the struggle for the renewal of our mother land. Surely as the day follows the night, so
shall the cold and dark past of Africa make way for a brighter tomorrow.
Returning to your eminent son on this
issue, Sheik Anta Diop who said, "The African who has understood us is the one who,
after reading of our works, would have felt a birth in himself, of another person,
impelled by an historical conscience, a true creator, a Promethean carrier of a new
civilization and perfectly aware of what the whole earth owes to his ancestral genius in
all domains of science, culture and religion".
Women, who have given so magnanimously to
the well being of humanity deserves the front-line role in our army for the African
Renaissance.
We are confident that the African
Continent, which is the cradle of humanity will rise to this challenge. The collective
will of our ancestors saw the end to this slavery, we decolonised and liberated our entire
continent and we defeated and destroyed the apartheid system.
The 21st century has to be an African
Century, therefore, the fight against racism, xenophobia and the elimination of conflict
is critical. The creation of an non-sexist continent is a pre-requisite to the success of
the continent These struggles have to be fought both by men and women, side-by-side. The
continent can not claim the 21st century until the women are truly liberated.
We all have a responsibility individually
and collectively in making this 21st century the African century. We owe it to the future
generations and to those who liberated us.
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