What differentiates the 20
female senators of the United States Congress who signed a joint statement in
support of the #BringBackOurGirls campaign and the 34 collectively silent women
in Nigeria’s seventh Assembly?
According
to the New York Times, within 2 weeks of the campaign for the Chibok girls
going global, female US Senators had also met with Secretary of State Kerry to
push for sanctions on Boko Haram and surveillance support for the search.
Senator Susan Collins, who co-spearheaded the effort, marveled at how easy it
was to get the women together, “There was no need to convince, or cajole, or
persuade.” “These girls cry out for a voice”.
Unfortunately,
the female legislators in the National Assembly do not collectively feel the
same way and it is important to ask why.
One
possible explanation is that regardless of party, female Nigerian legislators
cannot empathize with the public. Increasingly benumbed by daily reports of
deaths and abductions, the argument could be, that if nothing was done in
February when 59 boys were murdered in school, this abduction does not warrant
special reaction. Fair enough considering the body count of over 2000 Nigerians
killed by Boko Haram since Jan 1 2014. But Chibok is different because there is
a solution which is to get the girls back. If the stories of abductions since
November 2013 were not alarming, then the impunity of moving into a school and
carting off hundreds of girls in the care of a government that was under a
State of Emergency should be considered a game changer.
The
second theory for their silence has been that the women fear alienating their
parties and sponsors. We are 10 months away from the general elections and for
those in PDP and APC everything is about 2015. But this is why there is safety
in numbers. Using the Violence Against Persons Bill, currently languishing in
the Senate, the respective chairs of the Committee on Women Affairs – Senator
Esuene and Hon. Alaaga or even by Hon. Khadi who represents Jere constituency
in Borno, could have galvanized all the female legislators. They could have
shown agency and taken the opportunity for bi-partisan, joint house
showwomanship to push for a bill that has been in the system for over a decade.
The
lack of reaction is symptomatic of a larger malaise that infects all arms of
government: a disconnect from the public, an increasing unwillingness to
identify with social issues and/or recognize tipping points and a lack of
accountability to citizens which stems from the doubtful legitimacy of those
elected into office. That is the heart of the matter concerning elected
representatives who are not concerned with issues which impact over 70% of the
population.
While
there is a global campaign to increase the representation of women in
government in the belief that more women translates to sustained development,
under Nigeria’s current political system and structures, it is unrealistic to
expect this result. If we run a political process which is based not on valid
votes but on rigging, violence, vote buying, security agency manipulation and
compromised electoral officers, then we cannot expect to have men and women in
elected office who are accountable to us.
This
explains the problem identified in a Washington Post article where the authors
pointed out that ‘the growth of women in African governance has not necessarily
translated into real influence’ (‘nor translated into gains for women and
children’). It also explains the silence of our female executives.
Some
think that one of the biggest flaws of any feminist movement is the belief that
women have an innate bond. Perhaps. But there is undoubtedly an empathy line
that lights up once in a while. Sometimes all humans get the tug but there are
situations, which are especially poignant for women, and loosing a child is one
of them. The individual statements of a few female legislators and any behind
the scenes support for the campaign are not enough. ‘I think when women come
together across party lines, it is very powerful and effective,’ US Senator
Landrieu said explaining why they acted. ‘When women stand united on an issue
like this, we can bring tremendous amount of moral authority to the issue.’ It
is a shame that our female legislators are incapable of understanding this.
It
will be an even greater shame if we cannot change our political system to
ensure that going forward, only the most capable and caring Nigerians get
elected into office to represent us.
So our female politicians only care about party lines and not about the cause of the women in Nigeria they are supposed to represent. What a shame. So they are no different from their male counterparts.
SaharaReporters.
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