WOZA’s Jenni Williams honored

The USA’s State department held it’s inaugural International Women of Courage Awards as part of the month-long commemoration of Women’s History month. Jenni Williams, the national coordinator of Women of Zimbabwe Arise! (WOZA) was among the ten recipients of the award.

In the first ceremony of its kind at the U.S. Department of State, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice March 7 paid tribute to 10 women from around the globe who have shown exceptional courage and leadership. The honorees represented Afghanistan, Argentina, Indonesia, Iraq, Latvia, Maldives, Saudi Arabia and Zimbabwe.

At the awards presentations, Rice congratulated the women for their “dedication, commitment and passion.” She said their work is transforming societies and serving as an inspiration to the international community.

The awardees are Jennifer Louise Williams of Zimbabwe; Siti Musdah Mulia of Indonesia; Ilze Jaunalksne of Latvia; Samia al-Amoudi of Saudi Arabia; Mariya Ahmed Didi of Maldives; Susana Trimarco de Veron of Argentina; Mary Akrami of Afghanistan; Aziza Siddiqui of Afghanistan; Sundus Abbas of Iraq; and, Shatha Abdul Razzak Abbousi of Iraq.

They were selected from 82 women of courage who were nominated by U.S. embassies worldwide.

Acknowledging that the road to equal rights is a “long journey,” Rice thanked the awardees for combating attempts to dehumanize women. The secretary shared with the audience the wisdom on a T-shirt she was given by Kuwaiti women when they won the right to vote that said: “Half a democracy is no democracy at all.”

Ms. Williams is as deserving a recipient of the award as any other after what she continues to subject herself to in Zimbabwe for the sake democracy. Violet Gonda, our friend at SW Raidio Africa aptly surmises the important role Williams has played in keeping Zimbabwe’s civic activism going,
Many said she was on a road to nowhere with her street protests and various efforts to resist the most brutal government clamp down on free expression in our time, but Jenni Williams - with the other Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) - has soldiered on regardless. She has been imprisoned, beaten, battered and suffered head lice in detention so many times she had to shave her head.

For the last five years, however, Williams has been an inspiration for peaceful campaigners throughout the world.

She truly is a hero in her own right. She has taken a loose coalition of women and turned it into the mainstay and inspiration of Zimbabwe’s entire civil disobedience movement. WOZA kept growing when the MDC faltered and split into two factions. WOZA has been so effective that in this highly paternal culture, some men have started to come out in support of WOZA. Williams has played no small part in all of that.

However, without taking anything away from Williams, I can’t help but mention that Zimbabwe is being held together by millions of women like her. Unlike many of their errant male counterparts, Zimbabwe’s women have stepped up to the challenge of fending for their families despite the collapsing economy and the plethora of dilapidated social institutions. The sad thing about most of these other women is that they often go it with little or no recognition for the valor and resilience. It is these women, who rise early everyday to scrounge up food for their families before they leave for work and school. During the day, these women toil endlessly to gather firewood and other inputs so they have a meal for their families at dinner. And at the end of the day, it is these women who are beaten, verbally abused, and worst of all, exposed to deadly diseases like AIDS all because of their loyalty to their children and families.

We cannot forget the important role these women play too. We must not forget the other women of Zimbabwe too.

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Kramer auto Pingback[…] Related Articles Does God Hear the Zimbabweans’ Cries? International Monetary Fund (IMF) Deputy Director Siddharth Tiwari described the state of the economy in Zimbabwe as “tragic” and “grim.” “It has faced three, four, five, six years of continuous output decline, a rise [in] prices at these rates over several years, increase in poverty, a decrease in public services, increasing HIV/AIDS rates. It is a tragic situation, frankly, and prospects are grim; they are not bright,” he said. The prospects are so grim that nearly a third of the country’s 12 million people have fled, some to escape the poverty and others to escape the way in which President Robert Mugabe’s regime deals with dissent. Since coming to power in 1980, the regime has routinely destroyed or appropriated political opponents’ homes and possessions and “redistributed” them to ZANU PF officials and supporters. Dissidents risk losing lives, homes and livelihoods. Operation Murambatsvina, the government’s controversial urban slum clearance program, created over half a million internally displaced persons and destroyed the livelihoods of close to 10 percent of the population. Eighty percent of the country’s population is unemployed. The IMF estimates that the rate of inflation, which currently stands at over 1,700 percent, could reach an unprecedented 4,000 percent this year. The average life expectancy in the country has dropped to 37, possibly the lowest in the world. The infrastructure is crumbling. Basic food commodities, transport, foreign currency, fuel and power are in short supply. Water treatment plants break down frequently and outbreaks of cholera in urban areas are claiming many lives every year. Nearly a quarter of the population is dependent on food aid in order to survive. These concerns have led to waves of industrial action, political demonstrations and protest marches. If it is not college and university students, it is women’s rights groups, the constitutional reform movement, trade unions, or one or both factions of the main opposition political party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) who are taking to the streets. Each wave of protests is dealt with ruthlessly. It starts with public threats of violence by senior government officials and the deployment of the country’s secret police, the Central Intelligence Organisation, to harass organizers, civic leaders and political opponents in an attempt to instill fear, to prevent the planning of protests, and to stop planned protests from going ahead. On numerous occasions activists like Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) Secretary General, Raymond Majongwe, have been harassed and severely assaulted by the police for organizing peaceful protests. Others — like civil rights activist and Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) national coordinator Jenni Williams — have been told by the country’s security agents that they will pay with their lives if they continue organizing and taking part in demonstrations and protests. Some activists, like University of Zimbabwe student leader Christopher Giwa, have died in accidents involving military personnel, prompting speculation that their deaths were nothing short of political assassinations. No public inquiries into their deaths were ever held. The free hand and impunity with which security agents harass, detain and torture ordinary citizens, trade unionists, civil rights activists and members of opposition political parties is not the only problem. The Government has introduced a battery of repressive legislation such as the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) of 2002 and the Interception of Communications Bill of 2006, which is expected to be passed shortly, in an attempt to curtail citizens’ rights to organize, express their grievances or protest against the way in which they are being governed. Critics of the regime have to contend with being placed under constant surveillance by the country’s security agencies. They also risk being placed under a travel ban: in 2005, the country introduced laws allowing government agencies to withdraw passports from people who threaten the country’s national interests and security. People on the government list whose passports are to be withdrawn include opposition political party officials Paul Themba Nyathi and Grace Kwinjeh; human rights lawyers Beatrice Mtetwa and Gabriel Shumba; and journalists Geoff Nyarota, Nqobile Nyathi, Lloyd Mudiwa, Basildon Peta and Caroline Gombakomba. However, in spite of bans on demonstration and political rallies and in spite of the repressive laws and the heavy-handedness with which security agents deal with dissent, industrial action and protest marches are going to continue until a solution is found to the crisis in Zimbabwe. Lord Hamilton of Epsom recently asked, “If it is right to invade Iraq to get rid of the tyrant Saddam Hussein, who was making life hell for the citizens of Iraq, why is it not right to invade Zimbabwe to get rid of the tyrant Mugabe?” Such a move would be unfortunate. It would only serve to make the situation worse for the ordinary man, woman, and child in Zimbabwe and would further undermine the democratic process in the country. It would give credence to Robert Mugabe, who accuses the MDC leadership of being puppets of the West and who has repeatedly said that the crisis in Zimbabwe is because of efforts by Britain and the U.S. to overthrow his government. As has happened with Saddam Hussein in Iraq, invading Zimbabwe to get rid of Mugabe would turn him into a martyr and would lead to the unnecessary deaths of innocent and unarmed civilians. The solution to the crisis rests with the people of Zimbabwe. For a number of years now, independent newspaper publisher Trevor Ncube has been calling for a “third way” — sentiments that have been echoed recently by the International Crisis Group in its March 2007 report, “Zimbabwe: An End to the Stalemate?.” In an interview with Chipo Chinembiri (Institute for War and Peace Reporting, Dec. 13, 2005), Ncube said, “We should find the middle ground — that is, we should find the good people in Zanu PF and good people in the MDC. We should find good people from across the board to speed up our nation’s aspirations. Let’s start afresh.” It remains to be seen whether this third way will be found any time soon. […]



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