| I Support Female
 Genital
    Mutilation' Internal Affairs Minister Designate.  
[Liberia] 
Despite campaign
    against the practice of female genital mutilation, 
Liberia's 
Internal Affairs Minister
    designate Ambulai B. Johnson has disclosed that the practice is not bad and
that he would
    not discourage it when he is confirmed by the Liberian Senate.  
The Internal Affairs
    Minister designate, Thursday told the Senate Committee on Internal Affairs 
that female
    circumcision was the constitutional rights of people practicing it.  
Responding to
    question posed to him by member of the committee, Mr. Johnson disclosed that
 he would be
    more concerned and worried over the issue if it were Liberians campaigning 
against it.
      "Those expatriates who are campaigning against the practice 
of female genital
    mutilation are ignorant to the matter and need to be educated 
about the practice." | 
  
    | Female Genital 
Mutilation: Being
    Conducted on the Quiet with Young Girls Exposed to Infections and to 
HIV.  
    [Malwai] Research carried out by the Malawi Human Rights Commission 
(MHRC) has revealed
    that in some parts of the southern region Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) is
 very quietly
    happening.  Shrouded in secrecy, the practice continues 
to take place and exposes
    girls to HIV infection without any challenge because no one will talk about
it.  
    Girls in some parts of Mulanje in the Southern Region have been undergoing 
FGM during
    initiation with the practice going almost unnoticed because of the secrecy 
surrounding the
    practice.  The practice, that involves the pinching off of the tip (cli
toris) of the
    girl's private parts, is conducted during the ceremony by the 
Namkungwi (elderly woman
    counselor and instructor).  Using her fingernails to remove the organ,
the part is
    pinch and severed by the namkungwi under conditions that are not 
sterile or hygienic.  Using a basin of water to wash her hands after 
each removal, she moves
    from one girl to the next, exposing the girls to different kinds 
of infections, including
    HIV.  Apart from the pain and risk of chronic infection that 
can lead to infertility,
    a girl can bled profusely and suffer server anemia.  The risk 
of HIV infection can be
    high during the time when the young girls are bleeding and wounds 
are exposed.  Some
    of the girls, although young, are already sexually active.  Working 
from one girl to
    the next in the way it is done could spread HIV infection should 
any one of them have
    contracted the virus.  The possibility of a young girls being HIV 
positive because of
    Mother to Child Transmission (MTCT) could also lead to other initiates 
being
 exposed.
      There is also the risk of infection being passed on to the 
girls if the namkungwi
    herself is infected with HIV and her bodily fluids which can carry the virus
 comes into
    contact with her hand and, inadvertently to the girls wounds during this 
time. | 
  
    | CDHR
 Engages
    Female Ward Committee Members.  
[Sierra Leone] 
The Ward Committee members in the
    Tonkolili, Koinadugu and Bo districts and local councils last week converged
 on Bo town to
    chart the way forward for women participation in community 
development.  The
    intensive workshop, which was organized by the Center for Democracy 
and Human Rights
    (CDHR) with funds from Westminster Foundation for Democracy, saw 
female ward
 committee
    members discuss pertinent issues related to women empowerment and the tenets
 of democracy.
      "CDHR had organized similar workshops in Koinadugu and Tonkolili
 where we
    shared our experiences.  This one in Bo is third in the series of workshops and
    probably the final one," she said adding that lessons learnt in Bo were
 remarkable
    and quite different from what they had earlier learnt.  "For example we face
    series of problems with our male counterparts especially councilors. Unlike
Bo where women
    are allowed to participate fully in council matters, in Koinadugu female ward committee
    members are not allowed to take part in any development activity in their
    communities," Kabah explained. | 
  
    | Former
    Deputy Leader Faces Rape Charges.  [
South Africa] Prosecutors in 
Johannesburg
    charged former South African deputy president Jacob Zuma with rape Tuesday,
a development
    that analysts said would end the tattered political career of a man once considered the
    favorite to become president in 2009.  The charges resulted from an alleged attack
    last month by Zuma against a 31-year-old woman and family friend who was visiting his
    suburban Johannesburg 
home.  South African newspapers have reported that the woman is
    an HIV-positive AIDS activist and the daughter of prominent members of the African
    National Congress, Zuma's party.  Zuma, 63, already faces corruption charges and was
    dismissed from his government post in June.  He was released on $3,125
bail after a
    brief, closed hearing at a magistrate's court Tuesday morning and was scheduled to face
    trial Feb. 13 at Johannesburg High Court.  In a written statement, Zuma
 said, "I
    wish to state clearly that I am innocent of these charges." He added, "I regard
    these allegations against me very seriously as I abhor any form of abuse against
    women."  Zuma also announced that he was suspending his activity within the ANC.
      But he maintained the title of deputy president of the party, and he
did not
    withdraw his name from consideration for presidency of the party, a post to
be selected in
    2007, or for president of South 
Africa during elections scheduled for 2009. | 
  
    | Rape
    Crisis Protests to Demand New Rape Laws.  [South Africa] Over 100 activists
    mainly coming from Rape Crisis, Treatment Action Campaign and Molo Songololo
 took part in
    a picket against rape outside parliament in Cape 
Town on Wednesday 16 November.  
    "We are here to put pressure on government to pass this new rape legislation,"
    explained Benita Moolman, training coordinator at Rape Crisis.   The new legislation
    will replace the current one, which was adopted in 1957 and still guiding rape cases
    today.  The new legislation will, among other things, define rape to also include
    boys and men.  According to the 1957 rape law, boys and men cannot be
    raped, only indecently assaulted, which means that punishment for
    perpetrators targeting boys and men is much milder than for rapists of women
 and
    girls.  Furthermore, Rape Crisis want the treatment program for rapists
 to be longer
     increased from 3 to 5 years  and all sex offenders must go through the
    program, which is too limited at the moment.  Prince Iwatts from the United African
    Christian Leaders Congress held his placard high at the picket.  "A rapist is
    not a man! Real men dont rape!"  He said sternly and added that he took
    part in the protest to pressure government to protect the victims of rape. | 
  
    | Women and Babies Jailed Over
    Protest.  [Zimbabwe] 
Nearly 200 Zimbabweans, including women with babies strapped
    to their backs, spent a night in prison for marching in an annual protest against economic
    hardships, their lawyer said on Tuesday.  Lawyer Perpetua Dube said members of the
    pressure group Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) were arrested while trying to
march through
    the southern city of Bulawayo 
in a show of anger against a crisis many blame on President
    Robert Mugabe.  "They are mostly housewives, the people who have to cook the
    food that is now in short supply.  They are saying we need love, we need food,"
    Dube told Reuters.  For the last three years police have scuttled WOZA
attempts to
    hold a march on Valentine's Day to highlight the social and economic problems that the
    group says have mostly affected Zimbabwean women and their children.  The country's
    woes are highlighted by chronic shortages of basic food items, fuel, and foreign currency,
    soaring unemployment and the highest rate of inflation in the world. | 
  
    | Sanitary
    Boost Gives Women Dignity Back.  [Zimbabwe] Over 500 000 sanitary products have
    been collected to help desperate women in Zimbabwe forced to use newspapers and rags as
    substitutes.  Speaking to Sapa on Monday Thabitha Khumalo, human rights
 activist and
    founder of Dignity, Period!, said a pack of 10 sanitary pads in Zimbabwe cost about
    1,5-million Zimbabwean dollars (about R100).  "The problem started
 in the late
    1990s when a company manufacturing sanitary products relocated from Zimbabwe to South
    Africa.  "That's when we started
feeling the pinch as prices of the remaining
    stock started escalating," Khumalo said.  "Then in 2001 and 2002 we started
    getting sanitary pads from the black market, but the hygienic standards were
 not
    good."  Khumalo said women in Zimbabwe were now subjected to domestic abuse as
    their spouses were mistaking infections acquired from using improper materials for
    sexually transmitted infections. |