2018
SADC GENDER BAROMETER LAUNCHED
The Barometer has been produced for the
last eleven years by the Southern African Gender Protocol Alliance, a network
of Women’s Rights Organisations that campaigned for the SADC Protocol on Gender
and Development in 2008, its updating and alignment to the Sustainable
Development Goals in 2016.
In keeping with global and regional
trends, reflected in the #MeToo, #TimesUp, #TotalShutdown and related
campaigns, the 2019 Barometer departs with past tradition in focusing
specifically on Sexual Reproductive Health and Right (SRHR).
The 2019 #VoiceandChoice Barometer is the
first civil society shadow report on the recently adopted SADC SRHR
strategy. It measures 100 indicators in seven thematic areas including
Sexual and Reproductive Health; adolescent SRHR; safe abortion; GBV; HIV and
AIDS; harmful practices and sexual diversity. The State of Women report details
progress made against the provisions of the SADC Gender Protocol using two
important yardsticks, the empirical SADC Gender and Development Index (SGDI)
and Citizen Score Card (CSC) to measure progress made towards Gender Equality
in the region.
The key findings of the two reports
include:
·
With an SGDI score of 60%, just one
percentage point higher than last year, the region needs to up its game if it
is to achieve gender equality by 2030. Seychelles has the highest SGDI score
and South Africa the third highest SGDI score in the region.
· The CSC which measures citizen’s opinions and
perceptions on government effort on addressing gender equality has increased
from 62% in 2018 to 66% in 2019 for the region, showing that citizens are
slightly more buoyant than what the actual figures show regarding the progress
on gender equality.
· The
SADC Gender Progress score which measures gender attitudes has increased to
from 53% in 2017 to 60% in 2019. Seychelles and Malawi (66%) have the highest
GPS. 49% of respondents said that people should be treated the same
whether they are women or men, yet 46% agreed or strongly agreed that a woman
should obey her husband.
· SRHR is
now firmly on the Southern African agenda but gaps remain in data collection,
legislation, policy, and service delivery for women and girls. The region has
made significant strides with the adoption of the Mahe Declaration on SRHR
(2016) and the SADC SRHR Strategy (2018) with an accompanying score card. Using
the SRHR indicators in the SADC strategy for which data could be gathered,
South Africa leads the way, with progressive laws and policies on abortion and
sexual diversity, but still many challenges with implementation.
Only two SADC countries, Seychelles and Mauritius, meet
the global target of less than 70 deaths per 100 000 live births for pregnant
women and girls. The maternal mortality rate is ten times more in the DRC.
· Adolescent fertility ratios in the region range from 27
per 1000 women in Mauritius to 152 per 1000 women in Angola.
· Only six SADC countries (DRC, Lesotho, Madagascar,
Malawi, South Africa and Zambia) have stand-alone Adolescent Sexual and
Reproductive Health and Rights (ASRHR) policies or strategies. Only five
countries (Madagascar, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa and Tanzania) in SADC
do not require parental consent for adolescents to access SRHR services.
· The age of access to contraceptives in SADC ranges from
12 in five countries to 18 in one.
· Only South Africa and Mozambique have legislation that
allows abortion on demand in the first trimester. Abortion is available under
certain circumstances in all SADC countries, with varying degrees of
restriction.
· Women, and especially young women, comprise the highest
proportion of those living with HIV and AIDS, except for the islands
(Madagascar, Mauritius and Seychelles) where intravenous drug needles are the
main means of transmission.
· Only six countries have valid National Action Plans
(NAPs) on GBV, 10 have expired NAPS and only three have fully costed NAPs.
South Africa broke new ground with a presidential summit on GBV in 2018, and is
establishing a multi sector forum to tackle GBV head on.
· While all SADC countries meet the requirement of the
minimum age of 18 for marriage for men, only three countries (Malawi,
Mozambique and South Africa) stipulate 18 as the minimum age of marriage for
women and men with no exceptions, i.e. are compliant with the SADC Protocol on
Gender and Development. In eight SADC countries (Angola, DRC, Madagascar,
Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe) over one third of all young
women are married by the age of 18.
· Homosexuality is now legal in one third of Southern
African countries including South Africa, Seychelles, Angola, Mozambique,
Lesotho, Madagascar and DRC. However, only South Africa allows for same sex marriages
and civil unions.