In Kigali African Leaders
call for more support to African women in agriculture, As Liberian Leader Says
Women Are Marginalized
KIGALI — African
women in agriculture have been marginalized in most programs geared towards
agricultural transformation in Africa which puts gender on the periphery of the
continent’s growth, says Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, President of Liberia.
Sirleaf, who is also the chair of
Empowerment of Women in Agriculture (EWA) initiative, made the remarks on
Saturday during a meeting on women empowerment in agriculture on the sidelines
of the ongoing 27th African Union (AU) summit in the Rwandan capital, Kigali.
Rwanda hosts the summit from July 10
to 18 dubbed “2016: African Year of Human Rights, with
particular focus on the
Rights of Women.”
“Women play a major role in
agricultural growth in Africa, yet they face persistent obstacles and economic
constraints. It’s time for us to create ways for women to contribute their
skills and talents to national development,” said President Sirleaf.
She noted that when African heads of
state launched their continental development plan, the New Partnership for Africa’s
Development (NEPAD), in 2001, women’s organizations banded together to protest
the initiative’s seeming lack of sensitivity to gender issues.
“Women’s organizations including
Empowerment of Women in Agriculture (EWA) initiative, and the Gender is my
Agenda Campaign Network (GIMAC), the African Capacity Building Foundation
(ACBF) demanded that NEPAD’s proponents ensure that women were not left out of
the social and economic benefits promised by the initiative,” Sirleaf added.
According to Macky Sall, President
of Senegal, if women are given equal access to land, seeds, as their male
counterparts, Africa can reduce hunger and poverty on the continent and the
whole world.
“This situation must change as
Africa spearheads efforts to transform Africa’s agricultural landscape,” he
added.
The African Development Bank (AfDB)
report indicates that women make up almost 50 percent of the agricultural
labour force in Sub-Saharan Africa and a total of 62 percent of economically
active women in Africa work in agriculture, making it the largest employer of
women.
In some countries, such as Rwanda,
Malawi and Burkina Faso, more than 90 percent of economically active women are
involved in agriculture.
Akinwumi Adesina, president of AfDB
said that agriculture in Africa is poised to remain one of the most important
economic sectors, accounting for around 25 percent of the continent’s GDP and
empowering women in agriculture will enable the continent address hunger and
poverty among Africans.
“While African women farmers are
essentially feeding the continent, they have remained largely in the
background, calling little attention to themselves and receiving little help.
The African Development Bank has embarked on a campaign to support women in
agriculture through funding and agricultural trainings,” he added.
Rhoda Peace Tumusiime, AU
commissioner for rural economy and agriculture, stated that African leaders
have committed to help African women farmers under the 2003 Maputo Declaration
(the Comprehensive Africa Agricultural Development Programme), which is
intended to increase support for smallholder farmers.
“We must work together with the
private sector to close the wide gap in wages and agricultural yields between
men and women if Africa is to achieve full economic transformation,” She added.
AU believes that the role of women
is largely limited to the unskilled parts of production whereby few own the
land and often do not control the income generated from the sale of
agricultural produce.
In 2012, during heads of state summit
in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, African leaders unveiled the strategy that will see
more women engage in agriculture from 2017-2026.
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