Aso Presidential Villa Abuja
The 2019 elections have come and almost gone, as the battles have shifted to the legal front. But a look at the race has shown that women are significantly few in the number of candidates and winners in the election. Except for a few of them that were elected into legislative houses, there were little gains for the women folks in the Nigerian political system.
However, the two major political parties in the country – All Progressives Congress (APC) and the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) – claim to love the womenfolk dearly. They wax lyrical tunes and political messages to show their interest in advancing the political interest of women in the country but, unfortunately, this is where it ends.
In the last general election, no woman was nominated governorship candidate of both parties, and none was elected. Instead, the best they did was to nominate a few of them as deputy governorship candidates. And like deputy governors all over the country, they do not have any political influence, and their relevance is negligible.
According to available statistics, women and youth make up almost 80 per cent of eligible voters in the country. Yet, they have been ignored politically, except during elections when their votes count.
There is precious similarity between the APC and the PDP. That, in fact, is the reason for the seeming confusion over choice among electing Nigerians, especially women who voted overwhelmingly for the parties.
During the 2015 election circle, due to pressure put up by women’s right organisations who used Dame Patience Jonathan as their anchor person, the government of President Goodluck Jonathan, realising it needed the women's votes, proposed to reserve 35 per cent of all appointive positions for women and youth. This has somewhat become the official policy of the two parties.
Early last year, President Muhammadu Buhari signed into law, theNot too Young to Rulepolicy, which significantly reduced the age that people need to attain before vying for some positions, and also giving greater opportunities and inclusion for women and youth. This was done to curry the votes of the women and youth.
But has this come to any advantage? The outcome of the 2019 general election has proved the contrary.
One of the most perplexing questions in the polity has to do with the role of women and youth in the political system. Until recently, it has been widely assumed that politics in Nigeria can be controlled, but the new reality from the last election suggests otherwise.
No doubt, politically, the Nigerian woman has made political progress. From the days of the Aba Women’s Riot to Mrs Olufunmilayo Ransome-Kuti to Mrs Margaret Ekpo to Hajia Sambo Sawaba, there has been gradual inclusion of women in the political system. But unlike the youth who seized the prevailing political situation in the country, such as the plotting ofcoupby young soldiers, women have not had the opportunity to be at executive positions in the country.
Not surprisingly also, along with their children, they make up the bulk of victims of political violence in the country. Despite these, they are hardly compensated with positions in government commensurate with their qualification, apart from being given such politically irrelevant posts such as deputy governors, women affairs minister, etc.
But in the last few years, some of them have, however, been assigned such sensitive positions as the Minister of Finance, and Minister of Education where they have performed creditably well. However, this is significantly low.
In numbers, in the current political system, women’s representation in the House of Representatives is 5.5 per cent; in the Senate: 5.8 per cent. Only 5 out of 73 candidates that ran for president in 2019 are women; 1,668 men and 232 women vied for 109 senatorial seats while 4,139 men and 560 women competed for 360 seats in the House of Representatives.
Mrs Pauline Tallen, a former minister and the first woman to be nominated a deputy governor in the Fourth Republic, at a capacity-building workshop for budding women politicians said: "I advise (young) women tobelieve in themselves.Be prepared, becauseit’s not easy.”
Not easy, indeed. Three decades have passed since Tallen joined politics, but the state of women’s political participation in Nigeria remains abysmally low, with less than 6 per cent women in the parliament. Today, Nigeria has one of the lowest rates of female representation in parliament across Africa and, globally, ranks 181stout of 193 countries, according to the International Parliamentary Union.
“We have a whole lot of women across Nigeria who can do so much better than what we are offered now,” Joy Ada Onyesoh, National Coordinator of Nigeria’s Women Situation Room and Country Director for the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), averred. “The issue is that we are not given the opportunity… (men) are still operating a culture of women are meant to be seen and not heard.”
Since 2006, Nigeria’s National Gender Policy highlights women’s right to equality in economic, social and political life, with provisions to increase women in elected and appointed positions to 35 per cent: But, that hasn’t happened.
“There have been so many protocols, conventions, amendments of the Nigerian Constitution, which support providing a quota system. But, in reality, women are excluded in politics,” said Blessing Obidiegwu, Head of the Gender Division for the Independent National Electoral Commission. “Such problems as patriarchy, violence in elections and their economic situation serve as barriers to women’s participation.”
In 2016, a Gender and Equal Opportunities Bill was tabled, calling for the adoption of Temporary Special Measures to eliminate discrimination in political and public life. UN Women supported the Bill’s passage in five states (Anambra, Ekiti, Imo, Kogi and Plateau) and is currently advocating, alongside partners, for its adoption at the National Assembly.
Although Mrs Oby Ezekwesili was just one of the six females among the 73 presidential candidates, before she withdrew her candidacy, her role was significant insofar as she was a direct repudiation of the gendered narratives that portray women candidates as incompetent and unable to compete in the world of politics.
While women made up 47 per cent of registered voters for the 2019 elections, only eight per cent were cleared to vie for electoral positions in the presidential elections.
Furthermore, all six women presidential candidates have withdrawn their candidacy and will not be standing for elections with their male counterparts, even though their names remain on the ballot box. By all indications, women can expect to remain a significant minority in elected offices beyond this election cycle.
In the federal elections – President, Senate and House of Representatives – women’s candidature is unimpressive. For the presidential elections, men swamped women by a 12:1 ratio. Women’s presidential candidature stood at eight per cent.
At the National Assembly, women’s candidature was only 12 per cent of the total seats available, given that a total of 763 women vied for seats for the Senate and House of Representatives, out of 6,563 places available. Simply put, at eight and 12 per cent candidature for the presidential and National Assembly elections respectively, the prospects for gender parity in Nigeria remains a distant dream.
Women’s minimal participation in Nigeria has multi-dimensional implications for the democratic project in Nigeria and for the continuing quest for gender equality in Africa’s biggest economy. The 2019 elections were the sixth consecutive general elections since the beginning of the Fourth Republic in 1999. This marks what is, undoubtedly, a measure of democratic progress;if only for conducting periodic elections since the return to civil rule.
What remains deeply in doubt, however, is how inclusive this progress has been and, in particular, to what extent women have benefited from the democratic dividend of equality and fairness.
Role of First Ladies in political inclusion
The first of the wife of leaders of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to place a significant role in advancing the course of women was Mrs Maryam Babangida. With her Better Life for Women Programme, she significantly brought the woman’s cause to the fore. This was followed by Mrs Maryam Abacha, Mrs Stella Obasanjo and Mrs Patience Jonathan each, in their individual ways.
In the present dispensation, the wife of the President, Mrs Aisha Buhari, has been very outspoken in her resolve for political inclusiveness of women. A couple of years ago, she openly said to her husband and the political leadership that she would not mobilise the women for him if there are no political changes in the system.
During the 2019 election, she and the wife of the vice-president, Mrs Dolapo Osinbajo, introduced and ran the Women and Youth Presidential Campaign for the APC. The success of this was clear through the door-to-door campaign members embarked upon across the country. This is an indelible new introduction in the political lexicon of Nigeria.
Before the elections, President Buhari had repeatedly announced that he will engage more women when he wins his second term. We wait to see whether he will follow his words with action now that he has won his second term.
Progress
Liberia’s former head of state, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, made history as Africa’s first female president. In the United States, Senator Hillary Clinton has made a positive impact in America’s politics. Also a Republican Party’s presidential candidate, John McCain, picked a woman – Sarah Palin, the Governor of Alaska – as his running mate for the US election. This could be seen as the strong factor women constitute in the political parlance of any nation.
Today, many countries of the world are making efforts to bridge the gap between men and women in politics. But, in Nigeria, the representation of women in government – even though it has improved – is still very low compared to what obtains in other nations of the world, particularly in the developed nations. The representation of women in the 2003 election was poor: only three women made it to 109-member Senate, while 21 were elected into the 360-member House of Representatives. As it were, the number of serving female ministers is still very low.
Geographic balance, relatively speaking, is strength of the Nigerian political world. This has been proved by the 2019 elections. A greater inclusion of women in the political permutations of political parties in order to win future elections is becoming a reality. Whereas the exclusion of women has been maintained by successive governments without repercussions – just as it happened in the last elections – the implication of neglecting women may prove costly in 2023.
There is no doubt that women have some potentials and rights to contribute meaningfully to the development of their country. Therefore, the Nigerian government should work towards achieving gender equality in democratic governance, increase women participation and access to politics. It must be realised that the role of women as home-makers cannot be down-played in that it equally has an extended impact on their responsibility in service, the feminine touch – they say – cannot be wished away.
•Ify Ayomo is an Abuja-based Human Rights Advocate and Media Consultant.
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