Protocol
to the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights on the Rights of Women in
Africa
The States Parties to this Protocol
CONSIDERING
that Article 66 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights provides
for special protocols or agreements, if necessary, to supplement the provisions
of the African Charter, and that the Assembly of Heads of State and Government
of the Organization of African Unity meeting in its Thirty-first Ordinary
Session in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in June 1995, endorsed by resolution
AHG/Res.240 (XXXI) the recommendation of the African Commission on Human and
Peoples' Rights to elaborate a Protocol on the Rights of Women in Africa;
CONSIDERING that
Article 2 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights enshrines the
principle of non-discrimination on the grounds of race, ethnic group, colour,
sex, language, religion, political or any other opinion, national and social
origin, fortune, birth or other status;
FURTHER
CONSIDERING that Article 18 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights
calls on all States Parties to eliminate every discrimination against women and
to ensure the protection of the rights of women as stipulated in international
declarations and conventions;
NOTING that
Articles 60 and 61 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights
recognise regional and international human rights instruments and African
practices consistent with international norms on human and peoples' rights as
being important reference points for the application and interpretation of the
African Charter;
RECALLING that
women's rights have been recognised and guaranteed in all international human
rights instruments, notably the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women and its Optional
Protocol, the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child, and all
other international and regional conventions and covenants relating to the
rights of women as being inalienable, interdependent and indivisible human
rights;
NOTING that
women's rights and women's essential role in development, have been reaffirmed
in the United Nations Plans of Action on the Environment and Development in
1992, on Human Rights in 1993, on Population and Development in 1994 and on
Social Development in 1995; RECALLING ALSO United Nations Security Council's
Resolution 1325 (2000) on the role of Women in promoting peace and security;
REAFFIRMING the
principle of promoting gender equality as enshrined in the Constitutive Act of
the African Union as well as the New Partnership for Africa's Development,
relevant Declarations, Resolutions and Decisions, which underline the
commitment of the African States to ensure the full participation of African
women as equal partners in Africa's development;
FURTHER NOTING
that the African Platform for Action and the Dakar Declaration of 1994 and the
Beijing Platform for Action of 1995 call on all Member States of the United
Nations, which have made a solemn commitment to implement them, to take
concrete steps to give greater attention to the human rights of women in order
to eliminate all forms of discrimination and of gender-based violence against
women;
RECOGNISING the
crucial role of women in the preservation of African values based on the
principles of equality, peace, freedom, dignity, justice, solidarity and
democracy;
BEARING IN MIND
related Resolutions, Declarations, Recommendations, Decisions, Conventions and
other Regional and Sub-Regional Instruments aimed at eliminating all forms of
discrimination and at promoting equality between women and men;
CONCERNED that
despite the ratification of the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights
and other international human rights instruments by the majority of States
Parties, and their solemn commitment to eliminate all forms of discrimination
and harmful practices against women, women in Africa still continue to be
victims of discrimination and harmful practices;
FIRMLY CONVINCED
that any practice that hinders or endangers the normal growth and affects the
physical and psychological development of women and girls should be condemned
and eliminated;
DETERMINED to
ensure that the rights of women are promoted, realised and protected in order
to enable them to enjoy fully all their human rights;
HAVE AGREED AS
FOLLOWS:
Article 1 : Definitions
For
the purpose of the present Protocol:
- "African Charter" means the African
Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights;
- "African Commission" means the
African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights;
- "Assembly" means the Assembly of
Heads of State and Government of the African Union;
- "AU" means the African Union;
- "Constitutive Act" means the
Constitutive Act of the African Union;
- "Discrimination against women"
means any distinction, exclusion or restriction or any differential
treatment based on sex and whose objectives or effects compromise or
destroy the recognition, enjoyment or the exercise by women, regardless of
their marital status, of human rights and fundamental freedoms in all
spheres of life;
- "Harmful Practices" means all
behaviour, attitudes and/or practices which negatively affect the
fundamental rights of women and girls, such as their right to life,
health, dignity, education and physical integrity;
- "NEPAD" means the New
Partnership for Africa's Development established by the Assembly;
- "States Parties" means the
States Parties to this Protocol;
- "Violence against women" means
all acts perpetrated against women which cause or could cause them
physical, sexual, psychological, and economic harm, including the threat
to take such acts; or to undertake the imposition of arbitrary
restrictions on or deprivation of fundamental freedoms in private or
public life in peace time and during situations of armed conflicts or of
war;
- "Women" means persons of female
gender, including girls;
Article 2 : Elimination of Discrimination Against Women
- States Parties shall combat all forms of
discrimination against women through appropriate legislative,
institutional and other measures. In this regard they shall:
- include in their national
constitutions and other legislative instruments, if not already done, the
principle of equality between women and men and ensure its effective
application;
- enact and effectively implement
appropriate legislative or regulatory measures, including those
prohibiting and curbing all forms of discrimination particularly those
harmful practices which endanger the health and general well-being of
women;
- integrate a gender perspective in
their policy decisions, legislation, development plans, programmes and
activities and in all other spheres of life;
- take corrective and positive action
in those areas where discrimination against women in law and in fact
continues to exist;
- support the local, national,
regional and continental initiatives directed at eradicating all forms of
discrimination against women.
- States Parties
shall commit themselves to modify the social and cultural patterns of
conduct of women and men through public education, information, education
and communication strategies, with a view to achieving the elimination of
harmful cultural and traditional practices and all other practices which
are based on the idea of the inferiority or the superiority of either of
the sexes, or on stereotyped roles for women and men.
Article 3 : Right to Dignity
- Every woman shall have the right to
dignity inherent in a human being and to the recognition and protection of
her human and legal rights;
- Every woman shall have the right to
respect as a person and to the free development of her personality;
- States Parties shall adopt and
implement appropriate measures to prohibit any exploitation or degradation
of women;
- States Parties shall adopt and
implement appropriate measures to ensure the protection of every woman's
right to respect for her dignity and protection of women from all forms of
violence, particularly sexual and verbal violence.
Article 4 : The Rights to Life, Integrity and Security of the
Person
- Every woman shall be entitled to
respect for her life and the integrity and security of her person. All
forms of exploitation, cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment and
treatment shall be prohibited.
- States Parties shall take
appropriate and effective measures to:
- enact and enforce laws to prohibit
all forms of violence against women including unwanted or forced sex
whether the violence takes place in private or public;
- adopt such other legislative, administrative,
social and economic measures as may be necessary to ensure the
prevention, punishment and eradication of all forms of violence against
women;
- identify the causes and
consequences of violence against women and take appropriate measures to
prevent and eliminate such violence;
- actively promote peace education
through curricula and social communication in order to eradicate elements
in traditional and cultural beliefs, practices and stereotypes which
legitimise and exacerbate the persistence and tolerance of violence
against women;
- punish the perpetrators of violence
against women and implement programmes for the rehabilitation of women
victims;
- establish mechanisms and accessible
services for effective information, rehabilitation and reparation for
victims of violence against women;
- prevent and condemn trafficking in
women, prosecute the perpetrators of such trafficking and protect those
women most at risk;
- prohibit all medical or scientific
experiments on women without their informed consent;
- provide adequate budgetary and
other resources for the implementation and monitoring of actions aimed at
preventing and eradicating violence against women;
- ensure that, in those countries
where the death penalty still exists, not to carry out death sentences on
pregnant or nursing women.
- ensure that women
and men enjoy equal rights in terms of access to refugee status,
determination procedures and that women refugees are accorded the full
protection and benefits guaranteed under international refugee law,
including their own identity and other documents;
Article 5 : Elimination of Harmful Practices
States
Parties shall prohibit and condemn all forms of harmful practices which
negatively affect the human rights of women and which are contrary to recognised
international standards. States Parties shall take all necessary legislative
and other measures to eliminate such practices, including:
- creation of public awareness in all
sectors of society regarding harmful practices through information, formal
and informal education and outreach programmes;
- prohibition, through legislative
measures backed by sanctions, of all forms of female genital mutilation,
scarification, medicalisation and para-medicalisation of female genital
mutilation and all other practices in order to eradicate them;
- provision of necessary support to
victims of harmful practices through basic services such as health
services, legal and judicial support, emotional and psychological
counselling as well as vocational training to make them self-supporting;
- protection of women who are at risk
of being subjected to harmful practices or all other forms of violence,
abuse and intolerance.
Article 6 : Marriage
States
Parties shall ensure that women and men enjoy equal rights and are regarded as
equal partners in marriage. They shall enact appropriate national legislative
measures to guarantee that:
- no marriage shall take place without
the free and full consent of both parties;
- the minimum age of marriage for
women shall be 18 years;
- monogamy is encouraged as the
preferred form of marriage and that the rights of women in marriage and
family, including in polygamous marital relationships are promoted and
protected;
- every marriage shall be recorded in
writing and registered in accordance with national laws, in order to be
legally recognised;
- the husband and wife shall, by
mutual agreement, choose their matrimonial regime and place of residence;
- a married woman shall have the right
to retain her maiden name, to use it as she pleases, jointly or separately
with her husband's surname;
- a woman shall have the right to
retain her nationality or to acquire the nationality of her husband;
- a woman and a man shall have equal
rights, with respect to the nationality of their children except where
this is contrary to a provision in national legislation or is contrary to
national security interests;
- a woman and a man shall jointly
contribute to safeguarding the interests of the family, protecting and
educating their children;
- during her marriage, a woman shall
have the right to acquire her own property and to administer and manage it
freely.
Article 7 : Separation, Divorce and Annulment of Marriage
States
Parties shall enact appropriate legislation to ensure that women and men enjoy
the same rights in case of separation, divorce or annulment of marriage. In
this regard, they shall ensure that:
- separation, divorce or annulment of
a marriage shall be effected by judicial order;
- women and men shall have the same
rights to seek separation, divorce or annulment of a marriage;
- in case of separation, divorce or
annulment of marriage, women and men shall have reciprocal rights and
responsibilities towards their children. In any case, the interests of the
children shall be given paramount importance;
- in case of separation, divorce or
annulment of marriage, women and men shall have the right to an equitable
sharing of the joint property deriving from the marriage.
Article 8 : Access to Justice and Equal Protection before the
Law
Women
and men are equal before the law and shall have the right to equal protection
and benefit of the law. States Parties shall take all appropriate measures to
ensure:
- effective access by women to
judicial and legal services, including legal aid;
- support to local, national, regional
and continental initiatives directed at providing women access to legal
services, including legal aid;
- the establishment of adequate
educational and other appropriate structures with particular attention to
women and to sensitise everyone to the rights of women;
- that law enforcement organs at all
levels are equipped to effectively interpret and enforce gender equality
rights;
- that women are represented equally
in the judiciary and law enforcement organs;
- reform of existing discriminatory
laws and practices in order to promote and protect the rights of women.
Article 9 : Right to Participation in the Political and
Decision-Making Process
- States Parties shall take specific
positive action to promote participative governance and the equal
participation of women in the political life of their countries through
affirmative action, enabling national legislation and other measures to
ensure that:
- women participate without any
discrimination in all elections;
- women are represented equally at
all levels with men in all electoral processes;
- women are equal partners with men
at all levels of development and implementation of State policies and
development programmes .
- States Parties shall ensure increased and
effective representation and participation of women at all levels of
decision-making.
Article 9 : Right to Peace
- Women have the right to a peaceful
existence and the right to participate in the promotion and maintenance of
peace.
- States Parties shall take all
appropriate measures to ensure the increased participation of women:
- in programmes of education for
peace and a culture of peace;
- in the structures and processes for
conflict prevention, management and resolution at local, national,
regional, continental and international levels;
- in the local, national, regional,
continental and international decision making structures to ensure
physical, psychological, social and legal protection of asylum seekers,
refugees, returnees and displaced persons, in particular women;
- in all levels of the structures
established for the management of camps and settlements for asylum
seekers, refugees, returnees and displaced persons, in particular, women;
- in all aspects of planning,
formulation and implementation of post conflict reconstruction and
rehabilitation.
- States Parties shall take the
necessary measures to reduce military expenditure significantly in favour
of spending on social development in general, and the promotion of women
in particular.
Article 11 : Protection of Women in Armed Conflicts
- States Parties undertake to respect
and ensure respect for the rules of international humanitarian law
applicable in armed conflict situations which affect the population,
particularly women.
- States Parties shall, in accordance
with the obligations incumbent upon them under the international
humanitarian law, protect civilians including women, irrespective of the
population to which they belong, in the event of armed conflict.
- States Parties undertake to protect
asylum seeking women, refugees, returnees and internally displaced
persons, against all forms of violence, rape and other forms of sexual
exploitation, and to ensure that such acts are considered war crimes,
genocide and/or crimes against humanity and that their perpetrators are
brought to justice before a competent criminal jurisdiction.
- States Parties shall take all
necessary measures to ensure that no child, especially girls under 18
years of age, take a direct part in hostilities and that no child is
recruited as a soldier.
Article 12 : Right to Education and Training
- States Parties shall take all
appropriate measures to:
- eliminate all forms of
discrimination against women and guarantee equal opportunity and access
in the sphere of education and training;
- eliminate all stereotypes in
textbooks, syllabuses and the media, that perpetuate such discrimination;
- protect women, especially the
girl-child from all forms of abuse, including sexual harassment in
schools and other educational institutions and provide for sanctions
against the perpetrators of such practices;
- provide access to counselling and
rehabilitation services to women who suffer abuses and sexual harassment;
- integrate gender sensitisation and
human rights education at all levels of education curricula including
teacher training.
- States Parties shall take specific
positive action to:
- promote literacy among women;
- promote education and training for
women at all levels and in all disciplines, particularly in the fields of
science and technology;
- promote the enrolment and retention
of girls in schools and other training institutions and the organisation
of programmes for women who leave school prematurely.
Article 13 : Economic and Social Welfare Rights
States
Parties shall adopt and enforce legislative and other measures to guarantee
women equal opportunities in work and career advancement and other economic
opportunities. In this respect, they shall:
- promote equality of access to
employment;
- promote the right to equal
remuneration for jobs of equal value for women and men;
- ensure transparency in recruitment,
promotion and dismissal of women and combat and punish sexual harassment
in the workplace;
- guarantee women the freedom to
choose their occupation, and protect them from exploitation by their
employers violating and exploiting their fundamental rights as recognised
and guaranteed by conventions, laws and regulations in force;
- create conditions to promote and
support the occupations and economic activities of women, in particular,
within the informal sector;
- establish a system of protection and
social insurance for women working in the informal sector and sensitise
them to adhere to it;
- introduce a minimum age for work and
prohibit the employment of children below that age, and prohibit, combat
and punish all forms of exploitation of children, especially the
girl-child;
- take the necessary measures to
recognise the economic value of the work of women in the home;
- guarantee adequate and paid pre and
post-natal maternity leave in both the private and public sectors;
- ensure the equal application of taxation
laws to women and men;
- recognise and enforce the right of
salaried women to the same allowances and entitlements as those granted to
salaried men for their spouses and children;
- recognise that both parents bear the
primary responsibility for the upbringing and development of children and
that this is a social function for which the State and the private sector
have secondary responsibility;
- take effective
legislative and administrative measures to prevent the exploitation and
abuse of women in advertising and pornography.
Article 14 : Health and Reproductive Rights
- States Parties shall ensure that the
right to health of women, including sexual and reproductive health is
respected and promoted. This includes:
- the right to control their
fertility;
- the right to decide whether to have
children, the number of children and the spacing of children;
- the right to choose any method of
contraception;
- the right to self protection and to
be protected against sexually transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS;
- the right to be informed on one's
health status and on the health status of one's partner, particularly if
affected with sexually transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS, in
accordance with internationally recognised standards and best practices;
- the right to have family planning
education.
- States Parties shall take all
appropriate measures to:
- provide adequate, affordable and
accessible health services, including information, education and
communication programmes to women especially those in rural areas;
- establish and strengthen existing
pre-natal, delivery and post-natal health and nutritional services for
women during pregnancy and while they are breast-feeding;
- protect the reproductive rights of
women by authorising medical abortion in cases of sexual assault, rape,
incest, and where the continued pregnancy endangers the mental and
physical health of the mother or the life of the mother or the foetus.
Article 15 : Right to Food Security
States
Parties shall ensure that women have the right to nutritious and adequate food.
In this regard, they shall take appropriate measures to:
- provide women with access to clean
drinking water, sources of domestic fuel, land, and the means of producing
nutritious food;
- establish adequate
systems of supply and storage to ensure food security.
Article 16 : Right to Adequate Housing
Women shall have the right to equal
access to housing and to acceptable living conditions in a healthy environment.
To ensure this right, States Parties shall grant to women, whatever their
marital status, access to adequate housing.
Article 17 : Right to Positive Cultural Context
- Women shall have the right to live
in a positive cultural context and to participate at all levels in the
determination of cultural policies.
- States Parties shall take all
appropriate measures to enhance the participation of women in the
formulation of cultural policies at all levels.
Article 18 : Right to a Healthy and Sustainable Environment
- Women shall have the right to live
in a healthy and sustainable environment.
- States Parties shall take all
appropriate measures to:
- ensure greater participation of
women in the planning, management and preservation of the environment and
the sustainable use of natural resources at all levels;
- promote research and investment in
new and renewable energy sources and appropriate technologies, including
information technologies and facilitate women's access to, and
participation in their control;
- protect and enable the development
of women's indigenous knowledge systems;
- (c. sic.) regulate the management,
processing, storage and disposal of domestic waste;
- (d. sic.) ensure that proper
standards are followed for the storage, transportation and disposal of
toxic waste.
Article 19 : Right to Sustainable Development
Women
shall have the right to fully enjoy their right to sustainable development. In
this connection, the States Parties shall take all appropriate measures to:
- introduce the gender perspective in
the national development planning procedures;
- ensure participation of women at all
levels in the conceptualisation, decision-making, implementation and
evaluation of development policies and programmes;
- promote women's access to and
control over productive resources such as land and guarantee their right
to property;
- promote women's access to credit,
training, skills development and extension services at rural and urban
levels in order to provide women with a higher quality of life and reduce
the level of poverty among women;
- take into account indicators of human
development specifically relating to women in the elaboration of
development policies and programmes; and
- ensure that the negative effects of
globalisation and any adverse effects of the implementation of trade and
economic policies and programmes are reduced to the minimum for women.
Article 20 : Widows' Rights
States
Parties shall take appropriate legal measures to ensure that widows enjoy all
human rights through the implementation of the following provisions:
- that widows are not subjected to
inhuman, humiliating or degrading treatment;
- a widow shall automatically become
the guardian and custodian of her children, after the death of her
husband, unless this is contrary to the interests and the welfare of the
children;
- a widow shall have the right to
remarry, and in that event, to marry the person of her choice.
Article 21 : Right to Inheritance
- A widow shall have the right to an
equitable share in the inheritance of the property of her husband. A widow
shall have the right to continue to live in the matrimonial house. In case
of remarriage, she shall retain this right if the house belongs to her or
she has inherited it.
- Women and men shall have the right
to inherit, in equitable shares, their parents' properties.
Article 22 : Special Protection of Elderly Women
The
States Parties undertake to:
- provide protection to elderly women
and take specific measures commensurate with their physical, economic and
social needs as well as their access to employment and professional
training;
- ensure the right of elderly women to
freedom from violence, including sexual abuse, discrimination based on age
and the right to be treated with dignity.
Article 23 : Special Protection of Women with Disabilities
The
States Parties undertake to:
- ensure the protection of women with
disabilities and take specific measures commensurate with their physical,
economic and social needs to facilitate their access to employment,
professional and vocational training as well as their participation in
decision-making;
- ensure the right of women with
disabilities to freedom from violence, including sexual abuse,
discrimination based on disability and the right to be treated with
dignity.
Article 24 : Special Protection of Women in Distress
The
States Parties undertake to:
- ensure the protection of poor women
and women heads of families including women from marginalized population
groups and provide the an environment suitable to their condition and
their special physical, economic and social needs;
- ensure the right of pregnant or nursing
women or women in detention by providing them with an environment which is
suitable to their condition and the right to be treated with dignity.
Article 25 : Remedies
States
Parties shall undertake to:
- provide for appropriate remedies to
any woman whose rights or freedoms, as herein recognised, have been
violated;
- ensure that such remedies are
determined by competent judicial, administrative or legislative
authorities, or by any other competent authority provided for by law.
- States Parties shall ensure the
implementation of this Protocol at national level, and in their periodic
reports submitted in accordance with Article 62 of the African Charter,
indicate the legislative and other measures undertaken for the full
realisation of the rights herein recognised.
- States Parties undertake to adopt
all necessary measures and in particular shall provide budgetary and other
resources for the full and effective implementation of the rights herein
recognised.
Article 27 : Interpretation
The African Court on Human and Peoples'
Rights shall be seized with matters of interpretation arising from the
application or implementation of this Protocol.
Article 28 : Signature, Ratification and Accession
- This Protocol shall be open for
signature, ratification and accession by the States Parties, in accordance
with their respective constitutional procedures.
- The instruments of ratification or
accession shall be deposited with the Chairperson of the Commission of the
AU.
Article 29 : Entry into Force
- This Protocol shall enter into force
thirty (30) days after the deposit of the fifteenth (15) instrument of
ratification.
- For each State Party that accedes to
this Protocol after its coming into force, the Protocol shall come into force
on the date of deposit of the instrument of accession.
- The Chairperson of the Commission of
the AU shall notify all Member States of the coming into force of this
Protocol.
Article 30 : Amendment and Revision
- Any State Party may submit proposals
for the amendment or revision of this Protocol.
- Proposals for amendment or revision
shall be submitted, in writing, to the Chairperson of the Commission of
the AU who shall transmit the same to the States Parties within thirty
(30) days of receipt thereof.
- The Assembly, upon advice of the
African Commission, shall examine these proposals within a period of one
(1) year following notification of States Parties, in accordance with the
provisions of paragraph 2 of this article.
- Amendments or revision shall be adopted
by the Assembly by a simple majority.
- The amendment shall
come into force for each State Party, which has accepted it thirty (30)
days after the Chairperson of the Commission of the AU has received notice
of the acceptance.
Article 31 : Status of the Present Protocol
None of the provisions of the present
Protocol shall affect more favourable provisions for the realisation of the
rights of women contained in the national legislation of States Parties or in
any other regional, continental or international conventions, treaties or
agreements applicable in these States Parties.
Article 32 : Transitional Provisions
Pending
the establishment of the African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights, the
African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights shall be the seized with
matters of interpretation arising from the application and implementation of
this Protocol.
Adopted by the 2nd
Ordinary Session of the Assembly of the Union
Maputo, 11 July
2003
Source: ACHPR