http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=40646

POLITICS-SOUTH AFRICA: A Trying Passage for Women in the Ruling Party
By Stephanie Nieuwoudt

CAPE TOWN, Dec 31 (IPS) - The past weeks have been tumultuous for women in 
South Africa's ruling African National Congress (ANC).

On one hand, they end the year with a key gain in hand: the party's acceptance 
that 50 percent of posts in its decision-making structures must be held by 
women (albeit with an exception made for the top six positions in the 86-member 
National Executive Committee, which feature just two women: Baleke Mbete, 
chairwoman, and Thandi Modise, deputy secretary-general). Previously, 
representation of women was set at a third of posts. 

On the other, they find themselves serving under a president who has attracted 
the wrath of activists for his comments on AIDS and women -- a president, 
moreover, whom the ANC Women's League was instrumental in electing, and who may 
become head of the country during polls in 2009. 

Jacob Zuma won leadership of the ANC earlier this month in a bruising battle 
that ousted head of state Thabo Mbeki from the senior ranks of the party. This 
was despite the threat of Zuma being taken to court over allegations of 
corruption linked to a multi-million dollar arms deal -- claims that saw him 
dismissed as South Africa's deputy president in 2005. A few days after his 
election, the new party president was indeed charged, with corruption, money 
laundering, racketeering and fraud. 

The league's decision came after years of steady resistance to gender 
inequality, something to which the ANC itself has not been immune. While the 
party was formed in 1912, women were only formally admitted as members in 1943. 
The league was set up in 1948. 

In supporting Zuma the league endorsed a man who, while standing trial for the 
alleged rape of an HIV positive AIDS activist who was also a family friend (a 
charge for which he was acquitted), famously stated that he had taken a shower 
to reduce his risk of contracting HIV as a result of the unprotected sex. Zuma 
also implied that certain types of clothing worn by women can be construed as 
an invitation to sex. 

The endorsement came as a shock to some. 

"We are seeing a disappearance of women's agency. The women of this 
country...did not use their agency to promote a woman to a position of 
leadership. Their vote has shown a weakness of the movement in reading the 
situation and protecting the gains made over decades," Mohau Pheko, an 
independent political analyst and leading gender activist, told IPS. 

Lisa Vetten, a researcher at the Tshwaranang Legal Advocacy Centre in South 
Africa's commercial hub, Johannesburg, predicts that gender issues will slip 
down the ANC agenda under Zuma -- while for Mbuyiselo Botha, general secretary 
of the South African Men's Forum, the choice of Zuma shows the enduring power 
of patriarchy. 

"Women in this country still think that men are ordained by God to lead them. 
What message did these women send to young girls looking for role models? Or to 
those young women who have aspirations of becoming leaders in this country?" 
Botha asked. 

"We still have a long way to go before the issues of gender inequality are 
addressed fully." 

Mbeki had indicated that he would like to be succeeded by a woman, and also 
appointed a woman -- former minerals and energy minister Phumzile Mlambo-Ngucka 
-- to be South Africa's first female deputy president. 

However, as political commentator Karima Brown noted in a radio interview, this 
support for gender equality failed to yield a much-needed "political dividend" 
for the president. The opposite held true, rather, with Zuma reportedly 
accusing the Mbeki camp of using the matter of gender for leverage in the 
succession race, rather than for true women's empowerment. 

The general-secretary of the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), 
Zwelinzima Vavi, was futher reported as saying that parity was being pushed by 
"legendary womanisers" among Mbeki's supporters to take advantage of women 
voted into power. COSATU is in political alliance with the ANC, and the South 
African Communist Party. 

Former parliamentary speaker and ANC member Frene Ginwala was later quoted as 
saying that there were also legendary womanisers in the COSATU and Zuma camps 
who were conveniently escaping notice, and as questioning the extent to which 
women were present in COSATU's leadership. 

It's a debate that is unlikely to subside, come 2008. (END/2007) 

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