Saturday, 25 June 2016


International Widows Day 

SOLIDARITY MESSAGE

June 25, 2016

The international Widows Day comes at a time when millions of widows worldwide have nothing to celebrate about, except to reflect their plight pain that has been either ignored or not attended to. This has left them isolated and excluded in societal and community development issues.

It is my pleasure ladies and gentlemen at this very important day to share with you some of the some of the catastrophes bewildering widows internationally and locally.

As we share these thoughts it is my call today  that everyone here and elsewhere must  bear in mind that the widows that we are talking about here are our mothers, grandmother, sister, aunt, cousin  or great-great grandmother, hence what is affecting them affects everyone one  way or the other.

Before I share with you some of the these issues it is important at this juncture to make it clear that what pains most is that although widows have tried to register their plight in several platforms and in such days as this one, their concerns have not been given befitting attention and up to this moment they still languish in dire poverty, nevertheless it will be unfair to keep quiet about these issues, but to keep on pressing until such a time when there is meaningful change in this regard.

Internationally, widows are facing challenges which range from internal displacements, poverty, abuse, and rape, deprivation of fundamental rights such as the right to property, food, shelter, peace and other basic needs, which has made them to feel like alien species in their countries. As we commemorate this day let us bear in mind and reflect on these issues  and lets also remember that the struggle for the realization of widows rights is an ongoing struggle that needs all of to seriously think about.

Bringing the issue closer home, Zimbabwean women are among the worst affected, discriminated, abused, poorer and in all these challenges, widows are the one at the day bearing the harsh conditions families are enduring.

At this point let me waste no time but hasten to bring to your attention some key areas widows are finding themselves in.

The countries s inheritance laws are unclear and unfair  when it come to inheritance process, most widows have been  left homeless , land-less because they couldn’t access properties left by their husbands as they have been left to the mercy of the cruelty of their husbands families, and  is regrettable ladies and gentleman that unfortunately the law does not protect them.

Although the law recognizes that when a husband dies, their spouses must inherit the left property, the same law does not empower widows to rightfully inherit the property. Because of this we see today widows failing to send children to school and living in the streets without shelter and other basic needs.

Land ownership in Zimbabwe is one area that government must address as a matter of urgency, traditionally , land belongs to men and when they pass away, women are unfairly removed from that land and it is given to the brothers of the deceased especially is the women refuses to be forcibly inherited by the husband`s brothers. At the end of the day, it is the families left who suffer.

The current laws of the country makes it difficult for women to own property, for example it is difficult for widows to occupy houses left by their husbands as there are exorbitant fees charged by for them to process the documents , these fees are beyond the reach of many widows and they end up giving up on the properties .

It goes without saying that in the current economic hardships , women particularly widows are the most affected , a lot of people in Zimbabwe are unemployed and it is disheartening that when widows try to venture into some form of income generation project such as vending , the hash hand of municipal police descends on them harshly, women  constitute the largest number of people in the informal sector in Zimbabwe yet they face abuse every day in the streets as they are not allowed to work to look after their families.

It is our call today as we celebrate this day to authorities that this must come to end.

Currently widows cannot access their pension and the meager pension of their late husband’s has been depleted by hyperinflation, because of this, many widows cannot access decent shelter, water, and food water and health facilities.

As I conclude, I call upon the government of Zimbabwe to consider prioritizing the plight of widows in Zimbabwe in its endeavor to address gender imbalances that exist in our communities.

As I conclude, it is a fact that women constitute the a large part of the country`s population and it must be remembered that there is no meaning full development that can be attained without the full recognition of women rights and most importantly the rights of widows.

Linda T Masarira
Founder and National Director






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