There are so many progressive decisions and decisive events taking place all over the globe today.
African commission has adopted a resolution to recognize women's right to Land and other Productive Resources. This has been a very radical decision by the African Commission and we welcome this and congratulate the leaders who had the courage to take such decision.
As advocates of People's Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, we highly appreciated the brave stand of the people engaged. It is our struggle to gain equal rights for men and women who depend on the natural resources, particularly on Land.
Here you can see the important note as quoted from the message I received today.
Herman
African Commission Affirms Women’s Right to Land and Other Productive Resources
In November 2013, the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights adopted a groundbreaking resolution on women’s right to land and other productive resources.
With this resolution, the African Commission urged States “to fully
comply with their obligations and commitments to ensure, protect and
promote women’s right to land and property” and encouraged them “to
repeal discriminatory laws and adopt legislative measures to sanction
customary practices that limit or have a negative impact on women’s
access to, use of and control over land and other productive
resources.” The Commission also called on States “to organise sustained
public sensitisation, information and education campaigns for community
and religious leaders in order to transform socio-cultural patterns of
conduct that deprive women of their security of enjoyment of and equal
access to property, land and adequate housing” as well as “to undertake
land and agrarian reforms to ensure equal treatment for women in rural
development, land distribution and social housing projects.”
The resolution further urged States to:
i) provide legal protection to women against forced evictions and dispossession of land for use by public and private actors;
ii)
ensure widows’ right to inheritance, including the right to inherit the
movable and immovable property of their husbands, as well as their
right, irrespective of the matrimonial regime, to continue to live in
the matrimonial house;
iii)
ensure access to public justice services for underprivileged women by
providing effective remedies for violations of their right to land and
property, and free legal assistance in order to ensure compensation and
the restitution of land;
iv)
ensure that financial and microcredit institutions integrate the
specific needs of women into their policies and practices, including
access to credit and income-generating activities, especially for poor
women and women heads of households;
v)
integrate into national HIV/AIDS control strategies, as well as farming
and land policies, women’s right to land and property;
vi) put in place special measures to protect the property rights of women with disabilities; and
vii)
allocate specific resources to investment programmes that support and
strengthen initiatives by rural women, in particular small-scale
farmers.
Mayra
Gomez, Co-Executive Director of the Global Initiative for Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights, noted that “The Global Initiative has worked
with its partners in a concerted effort to achieve this goal and we are
quite happy with this result. The challenge now, however, is for all
of us to use this resolution in our advocacy for women’s substantive
equality in Africa and elsewhere, as well as to continually highlight
the important link between human rights and access to, control over and
use of land generally.” She added that “The Global Initiative worked
closely with Initiative for Gender Equality in Development – Africa,
ActionAid – Burundi, FIDA – Kenya, and others to make this resolution a
reality.”
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