There
is no tool for development more effective than the empowerment of women—Kofi Annan (1938-2018) former United
Nations Secretary-General.
Nigeria is not picking durable lessons from events around
her, from countries whose equal-gender institutions are speeding them to
achievement. We (or is it our leaders?) appear to be running with others in
this global village in the race against time, yet we are rooted to the same spot,
when other nations in the competition have moved on, moved on to destinations
where we can’t even sight their tail lights, after squinting into the distance.
One of the big factors that have winged their traction for meteoric move is the
preponderant or balanced presence of their women in government at the top, not
on the periphery of political office, government and bureaucracy. They invest
enormously in the fair sex to enlist them for work for the state and its
people, the same way they press the male into national assignment, gender no
stumbling block. Their women can conquer the peak to become the head of
government and the commander-in-chief of the armed forces.
But in Nigeria we say we aren’t ready for a female
president. Why spend on them, when at the end of the day the place of the woman
is the kitchen? Our president has put our women where he believes they belong:
‘the other room’. They are baby factories. They are to be given in marriage at
an early age, at the pleasure of the parents. Not for school. They are to be
housewives, protected from the wear and tear of the toil of the streets. Why?
Because we misunderstand the Scriptures’ portrayal of women as the ‘weaker
vessel’.
So why would you waste precious resources on what we have decided
would be chattels in the long run? Are they not weaklings, incapable of lateral
thinking?
Weaker vessel who wouldn’t know the nuances of governance?
Who wouldn’t in numerous cases outdo the menfolk if offered the opportunity to
perform, with a level playing ground? Weaker vessel who would not be able to go
to the moon as did the man who landed on that planet 50 years ago? Elsewhere,
the people are not as backward, besotted, bewitched and befuddled as to be
circumscribed in their relationship with women.
In 2015, Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau formed the
first gender-balanced cabinet in the country's history. There were fifteen
women in the cabinet of thirty. This historic feat set two scholars to work.
What would be the effect of such ‘large-scale’ invasion of the masculine no-go
areas by these weaker vessels? Professor Carles Muntaner of University of
Toronto and his colleague, Assistant Professor Edwin Ng of University of
Waterloo, wrote as part of their findings: "Canada’s gender-equal cabinet
vaulted the country from 20th to fifth in terms of percentage of
women in ministerial positions… Also…research has shown that women in
government tend to work in more collaborative and bipartisan ways and employ
more democratic leadership style compared to men’s autocratic style. Women are
also more effective at building coalitions and reaching consensus…When we
tested government spending as a mediating factor, we found that women in
government in Canada have reduced mortality rates by triggering…specific types
of health-producing expenditures… Women spend more on health and education.’’
Here in Africa, two of the continent’s fastest growing
nations, Ethiopia and Rwanda, are also drawing from the inexhaustible well the
womenfolk dig when they are drawn into power in their great numbers. In
Ethiopia, 50% of the cabinet are women, with strategic portfolios including
Defence falling into their laps in a severely patriarchal culture. In Rwanda,
the 26-seat cabinet also has half of them. Its parliament is 68% so-termed weaker
vessels. But in both countries the drafting of women to the frontline of
political theatre has helped to push their societies to dizzying masculine
heights unexplored when it was a male-centric show in the past. For instance a
World Economic Forum has published a survey by the International Monetary Fund
putting Ethiopia as the ‘’fastest growing economy in sub-Saharan Africa’’.
This
is attributed to new policies worked out by a ‘’government no longer dominated
by a few to the exclusion of a productive sector’’. It’s the same fairy-tale
picture in Rwanda. Paul Kagame’s government has tapped into vast resources of a
critical wing of the country, women, to build a society now the envy of most of
Africa after the 1994 genocidal war against the Tutsi ethnic group pulverized
Rwanda.
Socialist Cuba remains an abiding example of a country whose
women have been empowered to assert their place in every area of the society,
side by side with men: government, military, education, medicine,
administration etc. In the 70s and 80s many Africans were alarmed to see young
Cuban women soldiers and doctors storm our continent to join us in the
liberation struggle in Southern Africa.
These countries would have lost the battle for survival
without the full participation of their women, as Nigeria has repeatedly lost
it with its misogynist policy which has bared its fangs again in the proposed
cabinet of President Muhammadu Buhari.
Why are there only seven women in a list of 43 at a time the
world is realizing that society needs the full utilization of all its human
capital to survive? An inhibiting and miserly 16.3%! It implies that we are
still in the prehistoric age, unworthy of today and unprepared for the future
where all others, including smaller nations like Rwanda and Ethiopia, are
heading.
Buhari needs to revise the list and bring in more women. The
states are not faring better. For instance, in Oyo only one female has been
mentioned in a14-member team sent to the lawmakers. We need far more of them to
reflect our multi-gender strength and corral them for development. They will
give the nation the thinking of the age that is moving those accommodating them
to the real next level.
The gender distortion in governance that denies our
women, apolitical technocrats, youth and those with disabilities, their say in
the affairs of the nation is responsible for our poor showing and inability to
run Nigeria at the elemental speed necessary to liberate our people from the
deprivation we have been sentenced to. Building the nation shouldn’t be in the
hands of male politicians alone. You build a rickety halfway society if you
leave the women and the youth out of the project. The maxim is: little returns
to you if you send forth little of your vast potential into the field.
*Mr. Ojewale, a veteran journalist and writer is a regular contributor to this blog
*Mr. Ojewale, a veteran journalist and writer is a regular contributor to this blog
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