Disarmament Diplomacy
Issue No. 48, July 2000
The Gender Dimension of Making Peace in Africa
By Laketch Dirasse
quot;Women are the worst victims of war and hence the highest
stakeholders of peace. People who have to fight to protect even
their own bodies from abuse are the ones who understand the full
potential of what destruction means."
(Noeleen Heyzer, Women's Development Agenda for the 21st
Century, UNIFEM, 1995 p. 26)
"Civilian fatalities have climbed from 5% of war related deaths
at the turn of the Century to more than 90% in the wars of the
1990s. Recent times have witnessed new weapons and patterns of
conflict, including the indiscriminate use of land mines and
anti-personnel cluster bombs as well as the proliferation of light
weapons. As a result, many of the casualties are women and
children…"
(UNDP, Human Development Report, 1998 p. 35)
Introduction
The last decade of the twentieth century was marred by
unprecedented levels of political violence amidst on-going and
emerging crises in many parts of Africa. Complex emergencies
resulting from armed conflicts, economic deterioration,
environmental degradation including drought and floods, systematic
human rights abuse, and ethnic and religious strife have resulted
in unprecedented levels of population displacement, overall
insecurity and large scale human suffering. The majority (estimated
at 65%-80%) of populations displaced by war and conflicts are women
and their children. The incidence, character and intensity of wars
are also changing. The majority of the African conflicts occur
within states and, increasingly, the majority of casualties are
civilian.
It is in this context of insecurity and crisis that African
women are organising to denounce the impact of militarization and
conflict and advocate for peace and justice.
Context
Despite significant gains in human development, especially over
the period 1960-1980, Africa's recent development process has been
replete with social, economic and political crises. Currently, 44
African countries are either producers of or hosts to refugees and,
in many cases, they are both. Out of a total of 22.3 million
persons of concern to the United Nations High Commission for
Refugees (UNHCR) in January 1998, 7.3 million were African. Five
out of the ten countries producing the largest number of refugees
in the world are also African: Somalia - 524,000; Burundi -
515,000; Liberia - 486,000; Sudan - 351,000 and Sierra Leone -
320,000.1
The displaced populations who do not cross their national
borders (internally displaced) are more numerous than refugees.
Since there is no special agency with a clear mandate for
assistance to and protection of the internally displaced, only
rough estimates of their numbers are possible. In 1991, the Centre
for Policy Analysis and Research on Refugee Issues estimated the
population of internally displaced persons to be 16
million.2 It is a testimony of the frightening
volatility of African crises that these figures do not include the
thousands of internally displaced persons in Rwanda and Burundi, or
those from Sierra Leone, Democratic Republic of Congo, and the
Republic of Congo.
The consequences of conflict and war spare no one: women and
girls, however, are the most numerous and affected victims. Amidst
difficult and traumatic situations, African women courageously
struggle to build a semblance of stability in the lives of their
families and promote reconciliation and peace.
Gender, Conflict & Peace
There is widespread understanding of the link between gender,
environment, population and sustainable development and peace as
evidenced by the consensus reached at five of the major global
conferences of this decade: the UN Conference on Environment and
Development in 1992, the World Conference on Human Rights in 1993,
the International Conference on Population and Development in 1994,
the World Summit on Social Development in 1995 and the Fourth World
Conference on Women in 1995. While research based analysis of the
gender dimension of conflict and peace is in its infancy, there is
adequate data on the gender dimension in militarization, war and
post-conflict re-construction.
Gender, as the most fundamental social organisational variable
in all societies, changes across and within clan, class, ethnic,
religious, linguistic and nationality divides. Recent work on
gender analysis of the process of militarization at different
stages of war and conflict situations clearly indicates a complex
interaction. Militarization of a society leads to shifting
definitions of masculinity and femininity and to shifting
responsibilities for men and women. Gender ideologies of
appropriate roles of males and females either get shelved, with
women adopting roles traditionally performed by men, or restrictive
gender ideologies get re-emphasised. The recent imposition of a
dress code on all Sudanese women is an example. On the other hand,
women are known to have participated in many liberation and
resistance movements, such as Eritrea and Algeria, with
opportunities to transform unequal gender roles and relationships.
But it is also evident that unless gains of women during liberation
struggles are institutionalised, they tend to be quickly eroded in
the immediate post-conflict reconstruction phase (for example,
Algeria in the immediate post-independence period).
The fact that women are generally excluded from decisions to
wage wars and from positions of influence in military structures
does not necessarily mean that women do not participate in other
roles in support of war efforts. It is also true that women can and
have participated in killing, as was evidenced in the recent
Rwandese genocide.3 This raises the important question
of the interplay between gender interests and ethnic, national or
other group interests. Do women as a gendered group have common
interest regardless of their socio-economic background?
Cross-cultural data amply demonstrates that women of certain social
class have more interests in common with men of their own class
than with women of other classes. Yet, it is also true that
promoting hostility among and between women is an important feature
of patriarchal control. It is only with conscious understanding of
gender-specific problems and needs and acknowledgement of common
and differing existential realities that solidarity has been forged
in the global women's movement.
While the structural dynamics between men and women in conflict
situations needs further cross-cultural analysis, there is adequate
data to show that crisis situations tend to exacerbate
contradictions in normal societal relations and telescope social
inequities.4 Women and men's socio-economic roles
usually get altered with negative consequences for the health and
well being of individuals and families. Data on the gender-specific
impact of conflicts shows more adverse effects on women.
A major area of concern with grave implications for
post-conflict social reconstruction, peace building and development
efforts is the psycho-social impact of conflicts on large sections
of affected populations. Both men and women experience trauma as a
result of war-related flight, dislocation, loss of loved ones and
disruption of normal life. Recent research has brought to light a
number of gender specific factors that predispose women and girls
to different mental health complications. These include trauma of
rape and other physical abuse and violence; stress resulting from
role overload and increased responsibilities; and guilt and shame
resulting in loss of self-esteem because of actual and perceived
inability to care for the family.
For example, a study in two health centres in Rwanda found that
women as a group had been subjected to severe physical and
psychological atrocities resulting in severe trauma. The study also
found that by January 1995, eight months after the genocide
killings started in Rwanda, "at least four pregnant women were
showing up daily at Kigali maternity hospital requesting abortion,
which is illegal in Rwanda. These women had been raped during the
war. Two women had by then given birth, prematurely, and did not
want to see the babies. One of these women had been raped and
impregnated by the very man who murdered her husband and four
children". Following on the survey, a consulting psychiatrist,
recruited by the African Women in Crisis Programme (AFWIC) of the
United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), closely
examined 100 women. These women were coming to the clinics to seek
curative medical help. The psychiatrist diagnosed 70% of these
women as exhibiting severe post-traumatic stress disorders. The
rest were suffering from reactive depression, grief reaction and
anxiety. Unfortunately, comparable data on men was not
collected.5 Studies conducted among refugees in
Mozambique, Zambia and Central America have, however, demonstrated
that affected populations also deal with trauma in a
gender-specific manner. Men tended to worry more about
extra-familial factors such as lack of access to facilities whereas
women tended to worry more about family issues and relationships
with children and husbands.6
A less studied area in terms of gender-specific impact of
conflicts is disability. Evidence from Somalia and Mozambique
indicates that women and children form the majority of those who
have been maimed by landmines. The impact of war-related disability
and its implications for intra-familial gender relations and for
post-conflict societal reconstruction efforts require due
consideration.
As traditional family and kinship networks and support systems
break down, the vulnerability of women to physical and sexual
violence is increased. Rape as a crass and violent expression of
dominance and power is increasingly being used in conflict
situations. Rape has featured prominently in the Liberian, Rwandan,
Somali and Sudanese conflicts.
There is evidence of sexual abuse and rape of men and boys in
conflict situations, which has not been systematically documented.
For women, most rapes occur during flight but continue after the
women reach an asylum country or internal sanctuary. In displaced
or refugee camps women are further exposed to other forms of sexual
abuse. Many women are forced into non-consensual relationships in
asylum countries in order to receive protection and food security
for their children and themselves. The violence against women in
camp settings ranges from constant fear (of being raped, robbed or
killed), to forced sexual/marital relations, beatings and rape.
Violence against women in conflict and war situations is a
violation of their human rights. The Vienna Declaration and the
Beijing Platform for Action strongly advocate that rape be
considered a war crime. Indeed, the recent landmark decision in the
Akayesu case at the Rwanda Tribunal is a testimony to the success
of women organisations' advocacy and lobbying.
Women Organizing for Peace
Militarization and war are gender-differentiated activities with
gender-specific impact and consequences. African women have long
realized the heavy cost of war and conflicts no matter which
protagonist wins. They have thus been mobilising and organising at
local, national and regional levels to promote healing, conflict
resolution and peace building.
Many of the groups began as solidarity and mutual support groups
to meet basic survival needs or to protest against injustices. Such
solidarity is also the basis for the emergence of conscious
self-organisation to contribute to the resolution of conflicts and
the process of democratisation. The experiences of women's peace
movements from selected war-torn and post-conflict African
countries are instructive.
Sudan
Displaced women from Southern Sudan started meeting in
solidarity and support groups in Kenya in 1993. The initial group
comprised of 600 displaced Sudanese women and their children from
different ethnic and linguistic groups. The majority were single
heads of households and predominantly illiterate with only a small
number with high school education.
With assistance from some church groups, international NGOs and
individual well wishers, the women drafted a constitution and
managed to get registered as the Sudanese Women's Association in
Nairobi (SWAN). By early 1994, with assistance from UNIFEM's AFWIC
programme, they set up a centre where they could be provided with
important skills and services in the areas of psychosocial trauma
management, reproductive health and income-generating activities.
Over the years, the group's membership has grown and their
programmes have evolved to address issues of peace, women's human
rights and political participation.
In April 1998, SWAN trained a team of 20 Sudanese women from
diverse political and socio-cultural backgrounds on advocacy for
women's political empowerment. As part of the training,
participants developed a draft document, which embodies possible
aspirations for all the Sudanese women both in and out of The
Sudan. The document was subsequently placed before a Conference of
Sudanese Women in Nairobi during May 29-30, 1998. Further revisions
were made at a second Conference of Sudanese Women in Nairobi. The
motion through which the first draft of the document was adopted by
the first Nairobi Conference recommended: "That this conference do
now receive the draft Sudanese Women's Social Contract and
Negotiating Platform on the Status of Women in the Sudan as read,
to become a working document on Sudanese women's advocacy at
present and in future".7
SWAN plans to table the final draft document at a National
Convention of Sudanese women worldwide for final ratification. This
document contains issues that the Sudanese women want to see
legislated and implemented in The Sudan with regards to their
rights, status and governance.
Another group, whose membership overlaps with that of SWAN,
launched a peace movement called the Sudanese Women's Voice for
Peace (SWVP) in August 1994. This movement, which initially drew
its membership from women from all factions in Southern Sudan, has
also been networking with women from Northern Sudan, many of whom
have joined the movement in its quest for non-violent conflict
resolution. Sudanese women refugees in Egypt have also formed a
branch of SWVP. The SWVP is trying to harness women's energies for
peace and reconciliation to address the conflict between the north
and Southern Sudanese as well as the inter-factional fighting among
Southerners.8
SWVP members have been empowered through participation in
different training programmes and attendance at regional and
international meetings. The organisation is currently mobilising
and training women in conflict resolution and leadership skills
inside South Sudan.
Somalia
In Somalia, numerous women's groups and organisations emerged
after the collapse of the former government and the outbreak of
civil war. As argued in a recent study, Somalia between Peace
and War: Somali Women on the Eve of the 21st Century, "the
existence and activities of non-governmental organisations were
sharply circumscribed in the Siyaab Barre era. They have mushroomed
since the collapse of the government. The eagerness of many
international partners to promote women's issues encouraged a
blossoming of women's NGOs. While many of these remain dependent
upon external support for their ideological cues and funding,
others represent the authentic efforts of Somali women to organise
themselves and to assert themselves in meaningful social and
political ways. A few more established NGOs - predating the
collapse of government - have used the opportunity to establish
themselves as important forces within their communities,
challenging the hegemony of the military factions of traditional,
male-dominated structures."9
The same study further argues that the "overall reduction in
hostilities across Somalia over the past few years has been
accomplished by a growing disengagement of women from the dynamic
of conflict and a growing emphasis on their responsibilities as
breadwinners with children and other dependants to support. ...in
many cases they have taken an active role in peace processes, both
locally and nationally."10
South Africa
In South Africa, Women for Peace was founded in 1976 in response
to the Soweto uprisings to protest apartheid and promote
inter-racial communication and understanding at the community
level. In the immediate post-apartheid period, they joined other
organised women's groups in lobbying for a gender-sensitive
constitution, and in implementing various socio-economic
reconstruction and reconciliation programmes.
Rwanda
In Rwanda, numerous community groups and organisations, such as
the Widows Association (AVEGA), came into existence in the
immediate post-genocide period as mutual support groups to address
the psychosocial and survival needs of their members. Over the past
four years these groups have joined hands with the collective of 35
women's organisations, Profemmes/Twese Hamwe, to promote
reconciliation, peace and rehabilitation. In 1997, this
organisation's peace campaign resulted in it being awarded the
first UNESCO Mandajeet Singh Prize of Tolerance and Peace. In 1998,
the collective and its constituent community members focussed on
advocacy and lobbying for women's political and economic rights,
particularly land and property rights, and issues of violence
against women and girls.
Women's Role in Conflict Transformation
African women play critical roles in mediation in conflict
situations. For example, Somali women have played significant parts
in mediating the release of several hostages. Important
negotiations with Tuareg rebels were undertaken by the Mali women's
peace movement. Yet, such important roles are rarely officially
acknowledged or publicised. Peace negotiations are often limited to
a narrow range of actors, most of whom have limited accountability
to populations and particularly to women and their organisations.
Women are rarely included in official peace negotiation teams. In
the Mogadishu Peace Conference, women were only allowed to attend
as observers. At the Arusha Peace talks on Burundi, it took
considerable lobbying before women were for the first time
officially invited to attend the January 18, 1999 talks.
Gender issues are rarely addressed in peace agreements. Critical
gender concerns such as violations of women's human rights or the
need for new legislation to address women's inheritance and
property rights should be part of peace agreements. The opportunity
to rectify earlier inequities or to safeguard any gains women may
have made under situations of crisis including liberation struggles
risk being lost in the immediate post-conflict reconstruction
period.
The Kampala Action Plan on Women and Peace, which had been
endorsed by the Organization of African Unity (OAU) Heads of
States, the Kigali Declaration and Plan of Action on Peace, Gender
and Development, as well as the African and Global Platform for
Action, provide important agreed actions and strategies now
requiring to be translated into national plans, incorporated in
national legislation and implemented.
For their part, African women's peace movements have joined
hands and formed the Federation of African Women's Peace Networks
(FERFAP).11 FERFAP, whose secretariat is in Kigali,
Rwanda, is currently composed of peace movements and networks from
16 African countries, namely, Angola, Algeria, Burundi, Burkina
Faso, Chad, Congo-Brazzaville, Liberia, Mali, Mozambique, Rwanda,
Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan and Zambia. FERFAP's
main goal is to contribute to the co-ordination, rationalisation
and development of activities that support women's full and
effective participation in conflict prevention, management and
resolution in Africa. FERFAP also plans to collaborate with local
institutions, national and international NGOs and governments, on
the promotion and support of universal disarmament, adoption and
implementation of international laws, conventions and agreements by
African governments for the maintenance of peace.
The formation of FERFAP is a major step in the evolution of
African women's peace movements. Both the Federation and its member
organisations require well co-ordinated support to enable them
achieve their objectives.
Conclusion: Towards Strengthening African Women's Peace
Efforts
There is no doubt about the determination and potentials of
African women to be key players in the resolution of conflicts and
the promotion of durable peace in Africa. This paper has
highlighted the nature and potentials of African women's own
initiatives for peace. There is need for sustained solidarity and
support in a number of areas.
Firstly, capacity building activities are essential in
order to strengthen African women's young organisations. Here it is
imperative that women are trained in organisational management as
well as negotiation skills, conflict management and preventive
diplomacy. Administrative and programmatic support is also crucial
for the effectiveness of the peace movements.
Secondly, their coalition building efforts at the
national, sub-regional and regional levels need to be strengthened
and consolidated. A particular priority is the formation of strong
alliances at national level with effective participation by rural
based women's groups. At regional and international levels,
facilitating their involvement in regional and worldwide dialogues
and negotiations on issues of peace, governance and development
ethics is an important capacity building measure.
Thirdly, networking and strategic alliances with
international and regional human rights and women's rights
organisations is important to promote cross-regional learning,
joint action and advocacy for upholding the rights of African women
to peace, equality and development.
Finally, the international community must invest in
African women's efforts to resolve conflicts and build sustainable
peace.
Notes and references
1. UNHCR , Public Information Booklet, UNHCR by Numbers,
January 1998
2 . Center for Policy Analysis and Research on Refugees Issues,
1992 Report on Internally Displaced Persons, Mimeo p.2
3. African Rights 1995, Rwanda, Not So Innocent: When Women
Become Killers, African Rights London.
4 . Dirasse, L., 1995, "Gender Issues and displaced populations"
in Heyzer, N. et al (eds.), 1995, A Commitment to the World's
Women: Perspectives on Development for Beijing and Beyond,
UNIFEM, New York
5. Hagengimana, A., 1994, "Psychosocial Trauma management"
Consultancy report to UNIFEM/AFWIC, mimeo.
6. El Bushra, J., and E. Piza Lopez, 1993, Development in
Conflict: the Gender Dimension, Report of an Oxfam AGRA East
Workshop held in Pattaja Thailand, 1st - 4th
February, Oxfam UK/I ACCORD
7. Sudanese Women's Association in Nairobi 1998 "Social Contract
and Negotiating platform on the status of women in Sudan". Vol. 1:1
October 1998.
8 . UNIFEM, 1999, Sudan between war and peace. Internally
displaced women in Khartoum and South and West Kordofan.
Prepared by Amna Badri and Intisar Ibrahim African Women for Peace
series, UNIFEM Nairobi
9. UNIFEM, 1998, Somalia between war and Peace: Somali Women
on the eve of the 21st century. Prepared by Matt
Bryden. African Women for Peace series, UNIFEM Nairobi
10. Ibid.
11. The members of FERFAP are: Rwanda - l'Association des
Voluntaires de la Paix, Pro-Femmes/Twese Hamwe, Forum des Femmes
Rwandaise Parliamentaires; Burundi - Collectifs des
Associations et ONG Féminines du Burundi, Reseau des Femmes
Burundaises Pour la paix et la non violence; Somalia - IIDA
Women's Development Organisation, Dulmar for Women Development,
advocacy and peace (DDAP); Sudan - Sudanese Women's Voice
for Peace, Ahfad University for Women; Liberia - The
Liberian Women Initiative; Sierra Leone - Women's
International League for Peace & Freedom (WILPF); Burkina
Faso - Reseau Femmes Africaines et Droites Humains (REFAD);
Angola - The Roots of Peace Organisation; Mali -
Mouvement National des Femmes pour la sauvegarde de la paix et de
l'unite Nationale; Mozambique - Mulheres Mocambicanas Pela
Paz; South Africa - Women for Peace; Congo Republic -
Comite National des Femmes pour la paix; Algeria - Mouvement
des Femmes et Groupe de Recherche Violence; Chad - Union of
Women for Peace (UFEP); Zambia - Zusa Senanga.
Laketch Dirasse is Regional Director of the UNIFEM
Regional Office for East, Central and Horn of Africa in Nairobi,
Kenya.
© 2000 The Acronym Institute.
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