Only 0.6 pc of Africa's Indigenous Women are Educated
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Women from the Sengwer community who live in Embobut Forest in Elgeyo Marakwet County gathered to mark the International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples in August last year. A new study reveals that nearly all (97 per cent) indigenous women work in the informal sector.
File | Nation Media Group
By Moraa Obiria Gender Reporter
The Global Study on Situation of Indigenous Women and Girls (2020) report reveals that nearly all (97 per cent) indigenous women work in the informal sector.
Study sampled indigenous women from 11 countries including Kenya, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Chad, DRC, Mali, Nigeria, South Africa and Tanzania.
In Botswana, the San women reported facing discrimination at healthcare facilities on the basis of their appearance.
In Cameroon, accessibility to health facilities is problematic for pygmy women as they are often located far from their homes.
Only 0.6 per cent of the 18.5 million indigenous women in Africa have advanced education, a new report shows.
The Global Study on Situation of Indigenous Women and Girls (2020) report by International Indigenous Women's Forum (Fimi), a global network of indigenous women leaders, further reveals that nearly all (97 per cent) indigenous women work in the informal sector.
The study sampled indigenous women from 11 countries including Kenya, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon and Chad. Other countries are Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Mali, Nigeria, South Africa and Tanzania.
Beijing Declaration
The report whose analysis pegs on the progress made in attaining the 12-strategic commitments made under the named Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, 25 years ago, highlights distinct bottlenecks aiding leaving behind indigenous women in the journey towards sustainable development.
For instance, they are far behind in access to education. Out of the total population, only 11 per cent have acquired formal education. The rest lack the literacy skills crucial to securing better livelihoods.
While 61 per cent of the girls and women aged above 15 are in paid labour.
The declaration commits governments, international community and civil society, including non-governmental organisations and the private sector to act on women’s poverty, armed conflict, education, and health and end violence against them.
Distinct inequalities
Not a single country has fulfilled the commitments according to UN Women analysis on progress made this far, with indigenous women left far behind. This is because country-level laws do not still recognise them, eliminating possibilities of responding to their needs.
By understanding their distinct inequalities in access to healthcare services, countries could establish laws and policies to ensure fair treatment when seeking maternal healthcare.
In Botswana, the San women reported facing discrimination at healthcare facilities on the basis of their appearance, class and gender. For that reason, they avoid going to hospitals.
While in Cameroon, accessibility to health facilities is problematic. They are often located far from homes of the pygmy women and they offer charged services, unaffordable to the poor indigenous women.
Pregnant women
“In conflict-affected countries such as Mali, Sudan, Burkina Faso and Cameroon, indigenous women stated that pregnant women have to travel long distances to hospital and sometimes face difficult conditions on the journey,” reads part of the report.
There is also an underlying problem to rooting out gender-based violence (GBV) among the indigenous communities.
The women interviewed in this study spoke of the fear to report such abuses because of their dependence on men. In the Kenyan scenario, this would imply the indigenous women suffering in silence instead of seeking for help through the10 GBV hotlines including the national toll free number, 1195.
The report recommends adopting a human rights-based approach in policies and laws regarding indigenous women’s social, economic, civil and political rights.
It also suggests creation of “proper work opportunities for indigenous women corresponding to their skills and traditional knowledge,” in order to economically empower them.
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