Author - Leila

Women and the Right to Vote

ON OCTOBER 25, this year 2015, Tanzanians will go out to polling stations to cast their ballot. Come rain or shine, Tanzanians will go out to vote.  The right to vote is the most important and fundamental in our list of Basic Rights. It bestows on us the right to elect public servants to whom...

The International Day of the Girl Child

IN TRADITIONAL AFRICAN SOCIETIES, when a boy child is born, it is a time for celebration; rejoicing; gifts for the mother; festivities; slaughtering of the goat to herald  the arrival of a warrior; ululating; and songs on the prowess of the father for spawning a lion. With great pride and aplomb, the birth of a...

World Peace Day

SEPTEMBER 21 has been designated the International Day of Peace. It was in 1981 that the UN passed a Resolution to have the International Peace Day, which was commemorated for the first time globally, on 21, September, 1982. The slogan for the 2015 World Peace Day is “Partnerships for Peace, Dignity for All”. As we...

Breast Cancer Awareness, October

ONE IN 8 WOMEN will be diagnosed with breast cancer. Most of those one in 8 women should be able to survive breast cancer, with early detection and treatment. However, in developing countries, specially in Southern Africa, most of those 8 women would not have the awareness or skills on self examination for unusual lumps...

Defending the Defenders

Women Human Rights Defenders (WHRD) tend to be invisible and their safety is never taken in account in Tanzania, yet, we, the women human rights defenders exist and we often put our safety and sometimes, our lives at stake when we stand on the frontline to defend human rights and social justice, not knowing when...

HIV and AIDS- The Moral Dilemma

In the photo, Retired President, Ali Hassan Mwinyi (in the center) lights a candle on World AIDS Day TUMAINI, a pretty young lady of 22, who has bright eyes, a wonderful smile, and a charming disposition, is a Person Living with HIV and AIDS (PLHIV). No, Tumaini did not get HIV infection through sexual contact....

The Wonders of the Kanga

A kanga is regular piece of cloth, which has a border running around all the four sides and has a central motif often depicting a flower. What make the kanga different from other African print cloth are the proverbs that are printed on the lower part of the cloth and which are always boxed. Kanga...

WOMEN AND HUMAN RIGHTS

Violence against women both domestic and sexual and discrimination at work places, women’s multiple responsibilities and their poverty, are just a few of the glaring examples that are cited here and which African countries have ratified Human Rights Charters have failed to observe or have violated shamelessly. Most national development plans relegate women to a...

Prevention is the best option on sexual harassment

Despite the enactment of the Sexual Offences Special Provisions Act, 1998, Sexual Harassment continues to be most perpetrated crime against women. In the workplace, Sexual Harassment often includes threats, bullying, intimidation and emotional abuse. Tanzania has made strides in enacting SOSPA 1998 but much, much more needs to be done to protect women, especially in...

Women in Politics Do the right thing or stay in office?

The 1950’s saw the emergence of indigenous voices on the political platform of the then Tanganyika, though the voices were predominantly male which were occasionally interspersed with a few women’s voices like that of the legendary Bibi Titi Mohamed and that of Lucy Lameck. In the photo, Bibi Titi Mohamed is seen campaigning for Independence...

Corny chat-up lines Are unwanted like the floods!

*          “I want you to have my baby” from a strange man with bad breath at a cocktail party. *          “Is that locket made of gold?” said an office mate while delving inside her brassiere.   *          “I will marry you”, upon being introduced. *          ”I know you are dying for IT” from the seasoned...

Men, Men, A-Men!

You’ll know your man is cheating on you when   *   You hear him whispering into his cell phone in the bathroom   *    His phone rings and when you answer they cut off and the number is not shown on the screen.   *    There are lipstick marks on his collar...

Women in the Informal Sector

Photos by: Charles M. Kayoka WOMEN in the informal sector want to get training on building group dynamics; advocacy; human rights; and basic legal literacy; which would give them the skills to lobby for a gender progressive National Loans Policy.   They hope this would be a Regulatory Mechanism for women to get access to soft loans...

WOMEN WHO CHEAT

An estimated 7 to 12 percent of married women have had an extra marital affair at least once in their married life in Tanzania. In contrast, it is estimated that between 450 and 60 percent of married men have cheated on their wives. That is to say, more men compared to women get involved in...

VOICES OF WOMEN

TRADITIONAL TANZANIAN SOCIETIES ARE SEGREGATED.  The practice is more pronounced and entrenched among rural communities of Tanzania where traditionally, interaction between the two sexes is structured and limited. There are clear demarcation lines separating what is designated male and what is designated female.  This includes work; socialization; and ownership of resources.  Tradition in rules, norms...

SEXUAL HARASSMENT -The Silent Crime

In definition, sexual harassment means “unwanted sexual attention”. It can take the form of direct verbal proposition; it can be in the form of direct physical contact like groping, touching of hair, bottom or breasts. Or it can take form through crude language about women’s anatomy, backbiting with intent to defame, showing of women’s anatomy...

SAMPLE OF SCHOOL PREGNANCIES: 2006-2009 MTWARA REGION

2006  2007 2008 – JANUARY-FEBRUARY, 2009 Interventions taken on schoolgirl pregnancies 2008-2009   SAMPLE OF SCHOOLGIRL PREGNANCIES MTWARA DISTRICT, MIKINDINI AND MANISPAA   What needs to be done to reduce schoolgirl pregnancies? In consultation with CSOs working on the elimination of Gender Based Violence we need to develop a National Initiative to develop strategies to expand...

END GIRL CHILD MARRIAGE

Photos by :Charles Mustapha Kayoka NEEMA was married off at age 13 to a man of 62 who has two other wives. Her father was approached by the man who became her husband, after the man saw Neema on her way to fetch firewood for her mother. That same evening, the man, whom Neema calls...

VIOLENCE AGAINST OLDER PERSONS

Photos by :Charles Mustapha Kayoka WE ASSUMED that violence against older persons, women mainly, is confined in Mwanza and Shinyanga regions in mainland Tanzania based on the number of elderly women killed after being accused of witchcraft practice. Witchcraft practice is defined as causing famine, drought and foot and mouth disease among cattle. It is...

Witch hunts?

Witch hunts? WHEN TWO HUNDRED people assumed to be witches and warlocks were arrested three months ago and charged with witch craft practice in Tanzania, we watched askance and wondered how the prosecutors would be able to prove in court that the 200 detainees were really, and beyond reasonable doubt, practicing witchcraft. This follows reports...

Special Hearing on probate for AIDS widows

Sub-Saharan Africa is home to more than 60% of the population living with HIV (24.7 million) only a little over 10% of its population. AIDS is a long-term illness, and getting treatment in poor countries is costly. It depletes household income, and families often have to cut spending on school fees to pay for medication....

Gender Based Violence (GBV) Related HIV Infection

The Case of Sexual Harassment against Women Food Vendors- Mama Ntilie TO EFFECTIVELY engage in the Linkages between HIV/AIDS; Gender Based Violence and Poverty in the context of advocacy and service provision, one must adopt a diverse range of strategies to bring issues which are often considered controversial and insignificant, from the periphery to the...

Spirit Societies and healing through dance

 Bint Nanguja, we daren’t ask her first name. She is known as “daughter of Nanguja”. She is the “Kingi” of spirit societies in the Temeke district cluster. ‘Nanguja’ is not her father’s name. It is the name bestowed on her because of her powers to communicate with and to control spirits. Nanguja is her spirit...

Stop girl child labor

In Tanzania’s urban areas, an estimated 87-89 per cent of domestic workers are female, ranging in age from 12 to 45. Most female domestic workers are from poor, impoverished backgrounds, mainly from rural communities. They have been put in the position of seeking employment as domestic workers because of poverty within their immediate families and...