Friday, May 10, 2013

The rubbish dump

So the rubbish dump in front of my house is finally disappearing.  For more than five years
i have been battling with a rubbish dump, the more i tried to clear it the bigger it became.  Finally it looks like it is going to go away, not because my local authorities care about the enviromental effects or the health hazard but because someone is going to pay them to build on the site.

Chitungwiza is the only place where we attend a funeral because someone's beautiful baby boy has fallen into a sewage pool.  It is a place where people are getting cancer because an aerosol exploded close to their leg.  Rubbish dumps and burst sewer pipes are a trademark.  The local authorities do not believe in waste management they believe in building on every open space.  Even the recreational grounds have disappeared our children have to play soccer in the streets.  Very soon there will be a funeral somewhere after a young boy is run down by a car playing on the street.

The women in the dormitory spend all their days fetching water and then they have to clear rubbish dumps after this.  If you fail to clear that dump its your child who will end up with broken glass in his foot.

I'm optimistic about the vote for a woman campaign.  Maybe this year we will vote women into local government.  They will understand that waste management is part of their job.  Just maybe these women will understand the pain of a toddler drowning in a sewer pool.  I am very optimistic finally maybe someone will care that there is no water.  Please someone needs to do something before this council leaves the next council with nothing to administer.

Well the rubbish dump in front of my house will disappear after someone builds a house on my doorstep but it will reappear in front of another woman's house.  Be rest assured it will become another woman's problem


Thursday, May 9, 2013

Policies polices

New gender policy for Zimbabwe

We have had a gender policy that has been active in Zimbabwe for the past eight years.  Has it made a difference?  So much money is put into developing these policies and then what?  We put more money into the strategic plan but still certain demographical groups do not benefit.  Some are even claiming we are closer to gender equality than ever before.  We are forgetting that the rural population in Zimbabwe is largely made up of women have these women attained it.

With the women i meet in the streets of Harare of course i admit they are getting there.  What of women in the high density suburbs?  What of the women in the rural areas?  I don't see the really marginalised women being considered when we formulate policies and sit in hotels to draw up plans.  I see them struggling to get enough water to wash a tub of laundry.  I see them hiding the bruises that resulted from last nights beating.

As for our approach to attain a gender sensitive media well thats a laugh.  I appreciate that finally media and ICT's have been recognized as a thematic area but i don't believe affirmative action will reform Zimbabwe's media.  If more women own the media houses will that automatically guarantee that the profiling of women in our media will become positive?  The journalists coming from our tertiary institutions cannot even distinguish between gender and women.  When they hear gender issues they translate it to women's issues.  I believe the reform has to start at the training institutions then we can move to the newsroom only then can we take it to the boardroom.  I am all for women owning the media but it is not the magic pill that will finally allow to us read the papers without flinching.

The funniest one though is the one about community radios and televisions.  Where will we get the licences?.  What legal framework will guarantee this?  Community radio and television is important but right now in the Zimbabwean government who really cares?

I support good policies that project a positive vision but they will never change a country.  What Zimbabwe needs are men and women who will commit to implementing the good policies that we already have not new policies that will be ignored.