Mary Rusimbi, Executive Director of Women Fund Tanzania
The observation was aired at the One Billion Rising global campaign
to end gender violence that was observed nationally over the weekend at
the Coco Beach grounds in Dar es Salaam.
Addressing the multitudes gathered, the guest of honour, Executive
Director of Women Fund Tanzania Mary Rusimbi was keen to commend
‘increased youth awareness and participation’ that she said is ‘very
encouraging and vital to the cause.’
“I am very happy to learn that this global campaign has been embraced and nationally led by Tanzanian youth,” she said.
“The campaign has become an advocacy platform raising awareness
that gender violence is not a women’s issue rather, a violation of human
rights and is a global plight,” she added.
“Gender violence is a cross cutting issue…it knows no boundaries
not of age, race nor of religion…it affects both rich and poor,” she
noted and pledged continued support to community initiatives to end
gender violence.
“I am again very impressed to see youth show such good examples aimed at bringing about social change,” she summed up.
Seconding her views, Rotary Club of Dar es Salaam – Oysterbay
chapter Director of Public Relations Leanne Martin-Pollock, was emphatic
on the need for male participation and also the importance of ‘taking
initiatives from closed door meeting and out to the public.’
“We chose this venue because it is where the people are…efforts to
raise awareness must be taken out of closed door meetings and to the
public,” she said.
Evidence meriting the venue choice was clear when earlier on a
young girl walked up to one of the organisers, Tanya Mulamula, and
asked
to confide.
“If you can reach one person,” the very emotional Pollock went on to say “…that is all we aim for…one life at a time,” she said.
She also to took the time to highlight Rotary’s support for
community development efforts and also pledged continued support to
similar initiatives.
“We aim to address challenges within our immediate society…this is a long term standing approach of all Rotary clubs,” she said.
Speaking at the same event, Mwazuko Kongola, the Technical Advisor
to Engender Health a leading global women’s health organisation and
supporter of the campaign also acknowledged that there is increasing
youth awareness in gender issues.
“But we still have a lot of work to do,” he said cautiously.
He was keen to note Engender Health support for community based
efforts not only in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam where currently
they are conducting family planning initiatives but also in other
regions particularly in remote, isolated and mostly marginalised
communities.
Notably, in 2008 Engender Health launched a national dialogue about
engaging men in order to improve gender equity and reduce the
prevalence of gender-based violence and disease.
Another supporter of the event was the Dar es Salaam based private
waste management company Tirima Ltd whose Manager Alistair Noble said,
“It is our working philosophy to support community based activities like
this one.”
He went on to cite the importance of all stakeholders joining hands
in their various capacities to end all forms of violence on children
and women.
“It is our joint responsibility,” he said.
Tirima Ltd handled the sanitation of Coco Beach before and after
the event, a necessary condition for public gatherings that most event
organisers fail to adhere to.
One Billion Rising is the biggest mass action to end violence
against women in human history. The campaign, launched on Valentine’s
Day 2012, began as a call to action based on the staggering statistic
that 1 in 3 women on the planet will be beaten or raped during her
lifetime.
With the world population at 7 billion, this adds up to more than one billion women and girls.
On 14 February 2013, people across the world came together to
express their outrage, strike, dance, and rise in defiance of the
injustices women suffer, demanding an end at last to violence against
women.
Last year, on 14 February 2014, One Billion Rising for Justice
focused on the issue of justice for all survivors of gender violence and
highlighted the impunity that lives at the intersection of poverty,
racism, war, the plunder of the environment, capitalism, imperialism,
and patriarchy.
Events took place in 200 countries, where women, men and youth came
together to Rise, Release and Dance outside of court houses, police
stations, government offices, school administration buildings, work
places, sites of environmental injustice, military courts, embassies,
places of worship, homes or simply public gathering places where women
deserve to feel safe but too often do not.
Meanwhile, as Tanzania gears up to celebrate the World
International Women’s Day, women have been called upon to turn the
challenges they encounter into opportunities.
Briefing journalists in Dar es Salaam yesterday on the forthcoming
event to be held in the city, TruMark Managing Director, Agnes Mgongo
said that it is time for women in the country to realise that their
dreams can be achieved by turning challenges into opportunities.
She said that women should find ways of empowering themselves instead of been dependent either to their husbands or relatives.
“This is why TruMark is organising a special event on March 7 where
different women will have the opportunity to showcase their activities
in a move to recognise their contribution to social development,” she
stressed.
She said that though this year’s international theme is ‘Make it happen’ for TruMark it is ‘Women make it happen’.
She noted that the national event this year’s will be held in
Morogoro Region, however other celebrations will be held in Dar es
Salaam.
“The World International Women’s day is a perfect platform to let
women of different calibers meet and exchange views and knowledge on
economic issues and how to manage and overcome related challenges that
hamper their road to success.
According to her, they are expecting about 500 to 1000 women to
participate in the event where different speeches will be delivered by
various prominent women in society on topics ranging from leadership and
social issues to economy and entrepreneurship.
She called on women to participate at the various events in their
regions because ‘knowledge and interaction will help them in their daily
entrepreneurial and economic activities,’ she said.
Mgongo underscored that a mother is the family role model and ‘behind every successful man there is a woman.’
10 per cent of income generated at the event will go to providing
capacity building training to various girls in a bid to empower them to
achieve economic freedom.
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