Politics

Paradigm Initiative calls for digital gender equality for women

In celebration of the 2023 International Women’s Day, African Governments have been called upon to urgently initiate reforms aimed at bridging the digital gender divide currently being experienced on the continent.

A leading Pan African organisation advocating for digital rights and inclusion in the region, Paradigm Initiative, PIN, made the call as it joined countries across the world in commemorating International Women’s Day under the theme, DigitALL: Innovation and technology for gender equality.

The organisation’s Senior Manager, Partnerships and Engagements, Thobekile Matimbe, said a common form of equality breach is the widened access gap to digital technologies, termed the digital divide and, more emphatically, digital exclusion.

She said, “Today, we bemoan the extent of the digital divide across Africa and call for urgent reforms. We note with concern the online barriers that violently expel women from participating meaningfully on the Internet and call for policies and practices that enable women to connect and stay on board, without digital discrimination.”

Paradigm Initiative, which every year publishes a report highlighting the state of digital rights and inclusion in Africa, said women in their diverse capacities, including women journalists, politicians and celebrities are subjected to various attacks manifesting in the form of cyber harassment, non-consensual sharing of intimate images and trolling, pushing many from the Internet.

The 2021 edition of the report elaborates on the realities of the rampant exclusion of women from online platforms due to online gender-based violence and poor access to digital technologies. Without digital security, women cannot engage meaningfully online.

Matimbe was categorical that for women to be safe online,  a dual approach is imperative. “We need legislative frameworks that create a safe space for women online and hold perpetrators accountable on one hand and security sector practices that acknowledge the problem and hold perpetrators to account,” she said.

PIN researches women’s rights online, including access issues and online gender-based violence, to provide facts and figures in an otherwise under-reported area. It also provides litigation support and guidance to help navigate the legal system where rights have been violated and reported on the organisation’s digital reporting platform, ripoti.africa.

Paradigm Initiative, which believes that access to digital technologies and the internet are fundamental enabling rights, is committed to working with partners in Africa to bridge the digital divide and empower women.

According to the International Telecommunication Union,  ITU, in 2022, 62% of men were using the Internet compared with 57% of women globally, while in the least developed countries, 19 % of women used the Internet in 2020, compared with 86 % in developed countries in 2019.

Gaps in Internet access, digital skills and participation in science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM) fields were cited by ITU as some categories of the global digital gender divide. This divide is particularly stark in rural areas, where women often have limited access to education and economic opportunities.

The organisation further urged African governments to adhere to Resolution 522 on the Protection of Women Against Digital Violence in Africa passed by the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights at the 72nd Ordinary Session in 2022.

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