Show Us The Women of Power

African movies should portray the 'Black Woman of Power'

I have written a few articles about unfair stereotypes normally associate with Africa and things from Africa. To be fair to the outside world, African cultures play a major role in establishing some of these formulaic conceptions.

One thing that easily comes to mind, and which worries me, is the pigeonhole role normally offered to the woman in  most African movies. It has been a while since I saw an Africa film but the few that I can recollect had the same theme in all of them. The woman was for the most part depicted as the witch, the bitch, the maid, the weak, the evil, the cheated, the abused and others you can think of.  ‘Role model’ roles were few, if any.

Has this changed? If it has, then please, pardon me. If it has not, then it has to change and it has to change fast. Our young girls will be grateful to us if we do.

Media construct our culture, and the media we use to communicate with one another shapes our perception of reality. When young girls see women in movies or read about them in books, they regard these women as lucky individuals, role models, celebrities in today’s slang. In response, they try to be carbon copies of these flattered, lucky individuals. They therefore begin to model what they see. What we show them is possible is what they grow up expecting to accomplish.

African women are the most hardworking among women. They are strong, resilient, and they never quit. It is summed up in the old Nigerian song  “Sweet Mother’

It about time we saw the African woman portrayed as an educated entrepreneur, skillful international diplomat and a war hero. After all, what comes to mind when we think of Yaa Asantewaa?

It is just fair that the women play the ‘other roles’ too. Isn’t it?

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Anti-HIV/AIDS Campaigns: Give The Women of Africa an Option In Protection

Female condom

By K. Amponsah-Manager

An estimated 22.5 million people are living with HIV in the part of African below the Sahara – around two-thirds of the global total. In Ghana alone, there are approximately 260,000 people living with HIV/AIDS with 140,000 being women and 27000 being children. Ghana can count close to 160,000 orphans as a result of HIV/AIDS. In fact, Ghana is not among the worst hit countries; South Africa and Uganda for example, have worse numbers.

To some readers, this is just one of those statistics, but it is life and death to hundreds of families and institutions. The social and economic consequences of the AIDS epidemic are far and wide felt: in the African health sector, in education, industry, agriculture, human resources and the economy in general.

In terms of preventive or ‘prophylactic’ measures, the anti-HIV/AIDS campaign hitherto has riveted on promoting the use of the male condom.

Regrettably, however, in many communities in Africa, it is a severely stamina-testing exercise to convince some men embrace the use of the male condom. It is a complex issue that borders on tradition, religion and ignorance. This is compounded by the fact that in almost all cases, it is the man who cleaves to power in sexual relationships. Customarily, in the African ‘sexist society’, the man can choose to have multiple wives or one wife with multiple sexual partners. A woman who practices such a modus vivendi is referred to as a prostitute. It is unfair and effluvium for the party who wields the power to also decide on the means of protection in sexual relationships. I regard it a woman’s right issue to guarantee that women have the wherewithal to protect themselves in sexual relations.

But what is wrong with the male condom?

The campaign to promote the male condom has been going on for decades with some progress. Nevertheless, such progress does not well correlate with the efforts that have been expended. Some of the pretexts some African men put forward in opposition to the use of condoms include the following:

  • Condoms diminish pleasure or enjoyment of sex
  • Condoms ruins the mood
  • You cannot feel anything while wearing a condom
  • If a women loves a man, then she you should just trust him
  • in order for sex to be real, fresh must come into contact with fresh (of course, condoms make this pre-requisite unattainable)
  • Some even think it is sin to use the condoms during sex

For these reasons, I advocate that future anti-HIV campaigns adjust the current model and focus more on promoting the use of the female condom. The female condom should be promoted as an alternative to the male condom and should be available to all sexually active women. I believe that there should be a sharpened campaign to give credence to the female condom in African communities until it ultimately becomes a mainstream accessoryin the woman’s purse.

The Female Condom:

The female condom is a thin, soft loose-fitting polyurethane plastic pouch that is used during intercourse to prevent pregnancy and reduce the risk of sexually transmitted diseases. It has flexible rings at each end. Just before vaginal intercourse, it is inserted deep into the vagina. The ring at the closed end holds the pouch in the vagina. The ring at the open end stays outside the vaginal opening during intercourse. And during anal intercourse, it is inserted into the anus.

The penis is directed into the pouch through the ring at the end, which stays outside the vaginal during the intercourse. By covering the inside of the vagina or anus and keeping semen and pre-cum out, female condoms reduce the risk of sexually transmitted infections.
Why the Female Condom.

  • The female condom is more acceptable to most men as it does not constrict the penis as do latex condoms and hence does not result in a significant decrease in sensation.
  • It gives the woman some amount of power which in most cases is totally vested in the man.
  • It provides an opportunity for women to share the responsibility for protection with their partners
  • Research shows that, if women always use the female condom correctly, only 5% of users will report unexpected pregnancy each year. It can even be made more effective if used with a spermicide.
  • A woman may be able to use the female condom if her partner refuses to use the male condom
  • Unlike the male condom which is inserted in the heat of the moment and can therefore ruin the mood, the FC or FC2 female condom can be inserted up to 8 hours before intercourse so as not to interfere with the moment.
     

While the statistic continue remain ugly, it is vital that women take charge over their own health and not depend solely on their partners in making decisions relating to sexual matters.

How Do We Get There?

The main disadvantage of the female condom is that it is three times more expensive than the male condom and therefore beyond the means of women in most African communities where the average income is less than a dollar a day. (The cost of the female condom is between $2.50 -$5.00). This is the gap that the Government, Non-governmental Organizations and Foundations involved in the anti-HIV/AIDS campaign need to fill. By making the female condom easily accessible to all sexually active women in Africa, including prostitutes, we as a nation will make significant advancement in the fight against HIV/AIDS, other sexually transmitted diseases and unwanted pregnancy.

Again, even as we have done in the past and continue to do with the male condom, we need an aggressive campaign to educate our women that they have an option. Empower the ministries of health to provide free samples to sexually active women whenever the visit any health facility. The media should play their role, community leaders should not be left out, and religious organization should recognize that their support is vital.

The statistics are premonition, but it is not too late to apprehend the trend. The cost will be worth it.

 

Correction:
In my article, Anti-HIV/AIDS Campaigns: Give The Women of Africa an Option In Protection

I stated: The main disadvantage of the female condom is that it is three times more expensive than the male condom and therefore beyond the means of women in most African communities where the average income is less than a dollar a day. (The cost of the female condom is between $2.50 -$5.00).

Correction:

The cost of the FC2 Female Condom is around $0.60 for governments and donors and lower with increased volume. The $2 price is what FC1 costs on the shelf in a retail drug store in the US. The FC2 was developed to lower the cost of the female condom with intent to increase access to women in Africa. It has same design but different material and different manufacturing process which allows for the significantly lower cost.

I apologize for mixing these up in the article.

Thank you,

Kwabena Amponsah-Manager

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Globalization And The Development of Africa

The Oxford Advanced Learners Dictionary 6th Edition defines the word global as a phenomenon that includes many parts. Moving a step further from this definition, globalization could be described as a concept or phenomenon that includes all parts of the world and also operates around the world; hence the whole world is looked upon as a single community that is connected by electronic communication systems to form a global village.

Globalization goes a step further from these concepts; it also implies and provides the building blocks for the emergence of a homogenous world culture. It is often referred to as the new world order.

It must, however, be argued that globalization as a concept originated from the more developed western countries, as they argued that the economic backwardness of the world in general and the developing countries in particular was a product of the isolation of the developing countries from the world economy. This ” backwardness” it was argued could easily be remedied by greater global economic and cultural integration.

The motives for global integration [globalization] includes

  • The enhanced efficiency in production made possible by increased specialization in accordance with the law of comparative advantage.
  • Increased production levels due to better exploitation of economies of scale made possible by the increased size of the market.
  • An improved international bargaining position made possible by the larger size, leading to better terms of trade
  • Enforced changes in economic efficiency brought about by enhanced competition.
  • Changes affecting both the amount and quality of the factors of production due to technological advances.

Whatever its political connotations, globalization, fundamentally, is an economic phenomenon. Desire becomes demand only with the addition of purchasing power; this is true of countries as well as individuals. These economic realities enable countries to pursue their political policies of self interest with varying degrees of success.

Hence, in this discourse, I shall consider the economic and political dimensions of globalization with all other considerations indirect or subordinate to these dimensions.

Globalization and the development of Africa:

The inequality of nations challenges the theory of globalization as a world system; it is common knowledge that African countries fall within the category of countries regarded as underdeveloped. If we examine the structure of an underdeveloped economy, typically such an economy is an importer of capital and technology as well as consumer goods from the developed world.  These imported capital and technology play a crucial role in its development.

Domestic substitution for foreign capital and foreign technical know-how is a very costly affair often indeed impossible. This is true whether we think of replication or genuine substitution allowing for the different needs of a poorer country. For most African countries, the export sector is the leading sector which sets the pace for development and shapes the rest of the economy, both the pattern and pace of growth. Typically, size by size, the poorer a country, the more dependent it is on foreign markets, and foreign sources of supply. If the export sector stagnates, so that the inflow of resources from abroad is constrained, the pace of growth and rate of structural change respond accordingly. These factors are highly sensitive to such decline in the availability of foreign resources.

The terms on which the developing countries can obtain foreign exchange, capital and technology reflect the relationship between the rich and poor countries in the world economy.

In the face of the existing distribution of economic power, it is the rich countries who determine the terms, because in the short run, the developing countries in Africa need the products and services of the developed countries much more than the latter needs the output of the former.

Recent statistics obtained have in fact confirmed that Africa’s share in the total world trade is just about 1%.  This can be appreciated if we take a look at the international commodity and markets factors, African countries are mainly price takers until very recent trade negotiations and trade policy formulations .This dependence of African countries on developed countries/western countries has far reaching consequences for the development prospects of the former. The existence of such great disparities and one-sided dependence has placed a moral question on the concept of globalization.

Poverty in African countries also reflects essentially the technological gap between them and the rich countries. Even the oil-rich countries are no exceptions in this regard. This results in the developing countries inability to produce by themselves goods which require modern technical know-how and even less to develop an alternative technology substitute.

The trade patterns of African countries show that they usually export crude or processed agriculture or mineral based products. These countries have not succeeded in adapting or replicating for their own countries the technological development that have occurred in the rich countries. This is another fact that we are confronted with that has tended to negate the principle of globalization vis a vis the development of Africa.  Although ,the division of the world into developed and underdeveloped countries is an oversimplification ,vast differences in natural endowment ,economic conditions, cultural heritage, social organizations and political traditions are factors that have also tended to broaden the inequalities that exist between the developed countries and Africa in particular ,hence globalization has exacerbated “global poverty” particularly in these African countries

The difference in the material conditions of people living in various parts of the world is reflected graphically in two socio-economic indicators the rate of national literacy and the per capita energy consumption rate. Together these two indices provide a telling measure of sophistication of the production structure of a nation, and they are much significant than indicators based on the sectoral origin of gross domestic product [GDP}.

Literacy in African countries is considerably lower than that in developed/western societies as is per capita energy consumption. This structural characteristic of the economy reflects the inability of African countries to exploit their economic potential and also to enjoy the so called “benefits of globalization”

In fact, about 40 African countries fall within the purview of the poorest countries in the world. The global economic turmoil of recent years has affected developing countries with particular severity. In Africa, the free working of market forces in no way enables countries to counterview the constraints of globalization and multinational capital. The proponents of globalization must recognize that only global redistribution can ensure the development of Africa and that the developing world’s primary needs are far more social rather than private capital accumulation, which globalization entails.

Another dimension to the issue of globalization vis a vis the development of Africa is the activities[s] of multinational companies [MNCs]. These MNCs are agents of developed nations who are advocating a greater role for the free play of market forces without due regard to social factors within these African nations. As a result of these factors, Africa stands the risk of distorted development.

The calamities which this “new world order” is visiting on billions of people around the globe, particularly African nations cannot be quantified. As a matter of fact, globalization has led to a situation whereby the top 20% of humanity now controls 84% of the world’s wealth, while the bottom 20% makes do with a shade of over 1% of the world’s wealth.

The danger in which “wholesale” globalization portends for African countries and their development has been elucidated by Susan George, a Harvard trained economist, in the Lugarno Report [2003]. By the way, Lugano is a town located in Switzerland and sometime in 2003, a group of intellectuals [drawn from all continents in the world] gathered in the resort town to brainstorm about the world’s problems. They came out with what is now referred to as the Lugano report in which they documented the “evils” of globalization vis a vis the developing nations and particularly Africa in which they summarized that the main beneficiaries of globalization are its proponents and the more developed capitalist /Western nations, and that in order to sustain it through the next century and beyond, a sustained strategy needs to be vigorously pursued and implemented.

These has already started: it includes the reduction of population in African countries through the Population Reduction Strategy[PRS], which includes the promotion of genocidal conflicts, and wars, the curtailment of humanitarian assistance to victims of hunger, famine, epidemics and other natural and unnatural tragedies. The purging of the UN of notions like human rights, and equality of nations, the systematic degradation of the quality of foods and medicine sent to 3rd world countries, etc.

In conclusion, it is imperative to remind those who control and direct the free market globalization, that what Africa really needs for development is GLOBAL REDISTRIBUTION, and not this presently skewed globalization.  It is this global redistribution that can bring about greater global peace and security. To African nations, I recommend to them a renaissance or better still African Renaissance as the development of Africa does not lie in the hands of anybody but Africans themselves

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Health: Unusual Immunity For Those Who Recover From Swine Flu

Swine flu infection boosts natural immunity to unusual levels
Swine flu infection boosts natural immunity to unusual levels

A study reported in the Journal of Experimental Medicine shows people who pull through swine flu may be left with an unusual natural ability to fight off other flu viruses. While wrestling with the H1N1 virus, the body makes other antibodies that later can fight many other flu strains.

It is hoped that by exploiting these findings, scientist can make a universal flu vaccine that would defend against any type of influenza.

If such a feat is attained, it would solve an age old problem that scientists and researchers face at the moment: year after year, researchers struggle to forecast coming flu strains and how to rapidly produce a new vaccine for the strains each flu season.

Last year H1N1 swine flu virus that reached pandemic levels infecting an estimated 60 million people.

This study provides the possibility of making a single vaccine that could potentially provide immunity to all influenza.

In the nine patients they studied who had caught swine flu during the pandemic, they found the infection had triggered the production of a wide range of antibodies that are only very rarely seen after seasonal flu infections or flu vaccination.

Five antibodies isolated by the team could fight all the seasonal H1N1 flu strains from the last decade, the devastating “Spanish flu” strain from 1918 which killed up to 50m people, plus a potentially deadly bird flu H5N1 strain.

The researchers believe the “extraordinarily” powerful antibodies were created as the body learned how to fight the new infection with swine flu using its old memory of how to fight off other flu viruses.

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EAST AFRICA: Sex workers Enticed or Forced Into Unprotected Sex

Sex workers opt for sex without condoms for big money
Sex workers opt for sex without condoms for big money

NAIROBI/BUJUMBURA, 10 January 2011- Sex workers operating in East Africa are generally aware of the HIV risks of unprotected sex, but for many of them, the extra cash incentive clients often offer for sex without a condom is worth the risk.

“I personally don’t care about HIV when I see someone who can offer big money for one hour of sex,” said Scola Ndyigiza, a sex worker in the capital, Bujumbura. “I can get 100 dollars from one client when I have unprotected intercourse with him. Imagine, when I get more than five visitors a day, I become rich and pay all my debts… when I try to get them to use condoms, I get less than that.”

According to Basilisa Ndayisaba, coordinator of local NGO Society for Women against AIDS in Africa (SWAA-Burundi), which raises awareness among sex workers on condom use and HIV risk, despite their best efforts, many sex workers in Bujumbura remain apathetic about condom use.

“We face cases of those [sex workers] who agree to protect with condoms but others come to tell us that they have failed to use it or just have forgotten it,” she said.

According to UNAIDS, more than 70 percent of Burundi’s sex workers have been reached with HIV prevention messages. However, according to the country’s latest progress report for the UN General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS, HIV prevalence among sex workers remains very high, at about 38 percent, compared to the national average of 3 percent.

High risk

In Kenya, preliminary results of a study conducted in the capital, Nairobi, by the University of Nairobi – due to be released in 2011 – reveal that 900 out of 2,978 sexual encounters experienced by 161 sex workers surveyed, were unprotected.

The main reasons for failing to use a condom were given as client violence or promises of extra cash for unprotected sex.

Of 143 commercial sex workers tested for HIV, 39 returned positive results, representing an HIV prevalence of 27 percent, significantly higher than the national average of 7.4 percent. The 39 HIV-positive sex workers had a total of 177 unprotected sexual encounters during the study period.

“I can’t lie that I don’t know how important condoms are – I know. But I can’t count how many times I have slept with men without it, not because I like it, but some men tell you they like it without a condom,” said Eunice Mueni, 23, who plies her trade in Nairobi. “If you refuse, they beat you; some tell you they will give you double money. You fear being beaten and you like more money also, so you are in a dilemma and you just give in.”

According to Elizabeth Ngugi, lead author of the study, sex workers often find it hard to negotiate safe sex. “They might have the information on the need for safe sex, but when commercial sex workers are faced with violence they cannot negotiate for that safe sex and hence many of them reporting unprotected sex,” she said.

“Further, because they are desperate for money, it is hard for them to put off a man who wants unprotected sex and promises to pay more,” she added.

Ngugi noted that the neglect of sex workers by HIV programmes meant they were not always equipped with the skills to reject unprotected sex.

“If they are not treated as human beings, then they wouldn’t even listen to the messages. Everybody – including commercial sex workers – must be treated as critical partners in HIV prevention,” she said. “Young commercial sex workers are naïve and they have neither the skills nor the courage to negotiate safe sex.”

Bringing violent men to justice is often out of the question due to the illegal nature of sex work, and according to sex workers, their tormentors are sometimes officers of the law.

“One time I met a client and he told me he will to do it without a condom – I tried to negotiate and he just removed a gun and placed it inside my mouth saying he would blow out my brains,” said Mueni. “You can’t reason with such a person.”

“Some tell you they are police officers and they will arrest you because you are engaging in crime,” she added.

Poverty

Poverty is one of the main reasons women are forced to put up with violent men and take HIV risks. Burundi, for example, is one of the world’s poorest countries, with more than 80 percent of the population living on less than US$1.25 per day, according to the UN Development Programme.

SWAA-Burundi has come up with a scheme to provide sex workers willing to leave the trade with small loans to start businesses. Jacqueline Kanyana gave up sex work and now runs a successful business that grew from selling mobile phone airtime to selling clothes and food in Bujumbura.

“Imagine that I get HIV when I am poor and I have children to take care of,” she said. “I decided to stop unprotected intercourse because I need to… prepare my future.”

“Now I can go in Kampala or Nairobi to bring goods that I sell in different markets in Bujumbura,” she added.

But SWAA-Burundi officials say the loans are often unsuccessful, especially given that the women have little or no knowledge of basic business and accounting skills. “Some of them can’t use the loans properly and come back to us saying that they failed to use the money in business,” said Ndayisaba.

Education

“What we do for them for the moment is to go on sensitizing them on the importance of protection and we even deliver to them condoms to protect them; sometimes we organize seminars to teach them and at the end we deliver educational kits to let them know much about AIDS,” she added.

But according to Nicholas Muraguri, head of Kenya’s National AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Diseases Control Programme, educating the sex workers without doing the same for their clients only deals with half the problem.

“Of course it would be difficult to convince people to agree that they should not seek services from commercial sex workers, but the best places that you would reach such people with prevention messages are drinking joints, because those who patronize such places are the most likely to seek sexual services from commercial sex workers,” he said.

“It would be generally useful to make people see the need to use condoms with all their sexual partners, including commercial sex workers,” he added.

Source: (http://www.irinnews.org/)

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HIV/AIDS Is More Than Statistics

Kristen Ashburn
Kristen Ashburn

About the Speaker

Kristen Ashburn’s poignant photographs bring us into close contact with individuals in the midst of enormous hardship — giving a human face to struggles that much of the world knows only as statistics and blurbs on the news. She has photographed the people of Iraq a year after the U.S. invasion, Jewish settlers in Gaza, suicide bombers, the penal system in Russia, victims of tuberculosis and the aftermath of the tsunami in Sri Lanka and Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. One of her more recent works, BLOODLINE: AIDS and Family, looked at the human impact of AIDS in Africa.

Her unflinching photographs from the Middle East, Europe, and Africa have appeared in many publications including The New Yorker, TIME, Newsweek, and Life. She has won numerous awards, including the NPPA‘s Best of Photojournalism Award and two World Press Photo prizes.

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Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala: Want to Help Africa? Do Business There

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

About the Speaker

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, a director of the World Bank, was Nigeria’s Finance Minister and then briefly Foreign Affairs Minister from 2003 to 2006, the first woman to hold either position.

During her tenure as Finance Minister, she worked to combat corruption, make Nigeria’s finances more transparent, and institute reforms to make the nation’s economy more hospitable to foreign investment. The government unlinked its budget from the price of oil, its main export, to lessen perennial cashflow crises, and got oil companies to publish how much they pay the government.

Since 2003 — when watchdog group Transparency International rated Nigeria “the most corrupt place on Earth” — the nation has made headway recovering stolen assets and jailing hundreds of people engaged in international Internet 419 scams.

Okonjo-Iweala is a former World Bank vice president who graduated from Harvard and earned a Ph.D. in regional economics and development at MIT. Her son Uzodinma Iweala is the celebrated young author of Beasts of No Nation.

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Patrick Awuah: Educating a New Generation of African Leaders

Patrick Awuah
Patrick Awuah

About the Speaker

Patrick Awuah left Ghana as a teenager to attend Swarthmore College in the United States, then stayed on to build a career at Microsoft in Seattle. In returning to his home country, he has made a commitment to educating young people in critical thinking and ethical service, values he believes are crucial for the nation-building that lies ahead.

Founded in 2002, his Ashesi University is already charting a new course in African education, with its high-tech facilities, innovative academic program and emphasis on leadership. It seems more than fitting that ashesi means “beginning” in Akan, one of Ghana’s native languages.

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