Region 5 aims for more women in sport

Lovemore Dube

THE Africa Sports Union Council (AUSC Region Five) which represents member States in sports in SADC has made great strides towards having more women involved in sport.

To that end, they envisage a target of 500 000 women to be active by 2028 and are at the moment encouraging each lady to recruit four.

Stanley Mutoya the head of AUSC (Region 5) told Zimpapers Sports Hub that as a region, they were not yet at a level that satisfies the SADC protocol of 2008, which encourages 50-50 representation in all facets of life in the region.

Mutoya said strides have been made on the increase of women’s participation in sports.

“We have a gender policy, more on the equity end where we are saying formerly marginalised groups like women and those with disabilities have to be supported, they have to be capacitated.

“For instance, in the Regional Games we say if the chef de mission is a male, then a woman must be the general manager,”

Mutoya said they were making strides in the advancement and implementation of the SADC protocol.

“We are making strides we are not there yet,” said Mutoya.

He said there was a baseline study in 2013 that indicated that women constitute 15 percent of those active in sports in the SADC region.

“We carried a baseline survey in 2013, and we had figures of 15 percent. We made a follow-up in 2022 led by Stellenbosch University and we discovered there was a marginal improvement of two percent to 17 percent from 15,” said Mutoya.

Five sporting disciplines were looked at, with netball left out as it would give a skewed position.

Mutoya said the region could have better figures but because of forces behind the low uptake such as cultural and religion, the figures have stayed what they are.

“We can do better, there are other forces behind this, like social barriers which can be Religious or traditional, and other things like funding and capacity,” said Mutoya.

He disclosed that they had since come up with a women in leadership programme in the region where by every year in each country 200 women are trained.

This he said translated to over 2 000 women in a year in the ages of 18-35.

He added that while there is the urge to have women reaching the 50-50 barrier with men, it is important that they create women of substance.

“While we are still making a 50-50 parity, we want to create women of substance not for benevolence, women who are able and competent,” said Mutoya.

He emphasised that for the games they are happy with a 50-50 balance and the worst scenario of an overlay of 20 per-cent that is either 60-40 boys or vice versa.

The situation that we are in, is like elastic goals that have to be stretched.

Related Posts

Zim pledges US$1m to fight Ebola . . . Govt activates full emergency response

Gibson Nyikadzino-Zimpapers Reporter Zimbabwe has pledged US$1 million to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention to help fight and contain the spread of the Ebola virus across the…

New law to restrict US$4,5bn imports

Oliver Kazunga-Senior Reporter THE Government intends to restrict the importation of US$$4,5 billion worth of goods that can ordinarily be produced in Zimbabwe, under a proposed new law aimed at…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

×
×