GENDER INEQUALITY continues to be
a huge challenge in the governance structures and processes of many state and
non-state institutions in Ghana, right from the central government to the
local government level.
Perceptions and attitudes towards
women coupled with traditional and cultural setups have culminated in low
representation of women in leadership positions including the government.
For instance, of the 275
legislators currently in the seventh parliament, the percentage of male
legislators is as high as 89.1 percent compared to female which is 10.9
percent according to the country's Electoral Commission (EC).
The story is not so different at
the local level as there are more male Assembly members than females .
According to the EC, of the 137 women who contested the 2011 District Level
Election (DLE) in the Northern Region, only 19 were elected. The Tamale
Metropolitan Assembly (TMA) has only one female in a 64 member house and no
female representation in Parliament.
It is important to also note that
all District Planners, Coordinating Directors, heads of various government
institutions in the various Assemblies in the region are also male. This
imbalance results in decisions that are often inimical to the well-being of
women and the vulnerable and their livelihoods or economic resources in the
city of Tamale.
The Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs) especially goal 5, seeks to address key challenges such as poverty,
inequality, and violence against women and girls.
Although 47 per cent of world
business leaders according to the UN Women say they are in favour of gender
quotas on corporate boards, women remain underrepresented in leadership and
management level positions in the public and private sectors.
"Less than one-third of
senior- and middle-management positions are held by women. While 39 per cent
of countries worldwide have used some form of quota system to increase
women’s representation in politics, parity is far from reality—as of 2017,
only 23.4 per cent of all national parliamentarians are women" the UN
Women said in a report.
According to the report, women
worldwide make 77 cents for every dollar earned by men globally in the labour
market.
But sadly, due to the low
representation of women in the TMA, when economic decisions such as
decongestion of a city of traders are taken by city authorities, there is
usually hardship at home. It is worth noting that about 80 percent of traders
in two of its biggest markets, the Tamale Central and Aboabo markets are
women.
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Tamale Central Business District |
Children more often than not drop
out of school owing to lack of money for their general upkeep because mummy
or daddy is affected by decongestion.
Additionally a significant
number of these women traders do not own shops and therefore have to carry
their wares on their heads and hawk to sell. There are also those who
sell their wares on tables in open spaces inside the markets and around the
pedestrian precincts outside the markets.
Besides the markets serving as
places of commerce for traders, transport operators such as members of the
Ghana Private Road Transport Union also do business there. Their vehicles
occupy a significant space of the inner and outside perimeters of the
markets. This practice of transport operators and traders using the same
venue for business, over the years, has contributed to unnecessary human and
vehicular congestion. The safety of hawkers particularly from the rural parts
of the TMA and other adjoining rural districts and their communities and
other pedestrians and road users is also of concern to residents of the city.
There have been serval attempts at
decongesting the city in the past by city managers. Unfortunately, these have
been considered a knee-jerk reaction and poorly thought through measures
aimed at addressing the congestion problem but not representing a people centered
action, nor are they compliant with the considerations of community or
interest group engagements as stipulated in various international frameworks
such as the SDGs and the New Urban Agenda.
The actions of the TMA though
laudable to ensure a clean and safe, environment for all, have led to lots of
hardships to families as many traders can’t support the essential needs of
their family.
With a rise in unemployment facing
the youth particularly girls, trading in the city centre is their only
option. And even though the city authorities need to clear the city of filth,
in doing so to ensure the safety of drivers, pedestrians and traders, it is
also imperative to take into considerations their livelihoods and engage
appropriately with each stakeholder to draw their support for the exercise to
benefit the city.
On May 15, 2017, the Mayor of
Tamale, Iddrisu Musah Superior ordered a decongestion exercise to be carried
out in the central business district, targeting traders who sell on pedestrian
walkways and in the frontage of stores around the Tamale central and Aboabo
markets.
The objective of the decongestion
exercise was to ensure discipline on the streets devoid of congestion and
unnecessary filth.
The exercise was carried out by
the Tamale Metro Assembly’s decongestion taskforce comprising of personnel
from the police, military, immigration, fire service and prisons. The
taskforce was charged to remove all unauthorized structures as well as sack
vendors/hawkers from the streets.
Thousands of traders were
disgruntled. Many felt the mayor was insensitive to their plight as citizens
of this country. They wondered why in the absence of employment
opportunities, the mayor would choose to stop them from seeking a living by
hawking in the streets.
Many of the traders including
Maame Abubakari, a secondhand clothes seller, were stopped from selling on
the streets in the central business district area. As a result of the
decongestion, her business collapsed and she lost all her working
capital.
“I stayed in the house for
about 2 months without any work to do. I have 8 children I am taking care of.
Life was very difficult for me and my family”, she recounted in an interview
with her.
She reiterated the need for the
city to be accessible to all, while simultaneously, considerations of
livelihood should also be of priority concern to city authorities with
emphasis on the need for exhaustive engagements and education.
She advocated that, authorities
should always ensure people understand their priorities in order to support
implementation instead of resorting to rough and arbitrary destruction of
goods and property of the very people they are expected to protect.
Maame indicated that, but for the
generous support of her creditor, she doubts if she would have been able to
stand on her feet again. “My creditor visited me at home when I was sick….
that is in the immediate aftermath of the decongestion exercise. I told her I
didn’t have money to do the business again and she gladly told me she was
ready to give me some goods to sell if only I’m interested”, she explained.
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Maame Abubakari Selling Her Wares |
Sule, also a secondhand clothes
seller said they (traders) were asked to go and sell around the West Hospital
area and Kukuo. “When we went there, for more than a month nobody was buying
our goods. Some people’s business collapsed and they had to sit at home”, he
lamented.
But after weeks of persistent
agitation coupled with a ‘hide and sell’ tactics adopted by some of the traders
to sell their wares, little by little, most of the traders came back onto the
streets and pedestrian walkways to sell.
On behalf of other traders, Sule
and Maame appealed to the Tamale mayor to allow them to sell on the streets
only on Saturdays and Sundays and the rest of the days they can find an
alternative place to go and do business.
Considering the congested nature
of the Tamale central and Aboabo markets, many including freelance journalist
Philip Liebyang, have called for rehabilitation of community markets such as
the Kukuo and Lamashegu markets as well as the need for the construction of
new markets and recreational spaces.
However Philip fears that lack of
adequate consultations with stakeholders including women, physically
challenged persons and children will continue to reduce the future actions of
the TMA to an impartially planned agenda to bring further hardships to city
beneficiaries, and this will bring about more unemployment among residents of
the city.
“If the Kukuo market is completed
and a new one build at Lamashegu, these will reduce significantly the
increasing congestion in the Tamale central and Aboabo markets as well as the
central business district”, he opined.
Tamale is plagued with many issues
as the TMA attempts to implement its programme of action befitting a city.
Communities have unplanned roads, nonexistent home addresses to ensure
compliance of tax on properties, inadequate street lighting and poor
sanitation among others.
These issues could be solved
through appropriate engagements among city authorities, traditional leaders,
city centre interest groups, traders, women, youth and children to ensure
people buy into the city agenda and support in ensuring that all
including women have their voices heard in the city that is expected to be
their identity.
One thing is clear as one
interacts with the affected traders of the recent decongestion exercise.
Whereas many have gone out of business and unable to fend for their families
adequately, those who are still persistent, now find it difficult to break
even simply because there are restrictions that are not allowing them to sell
in some places.
By Joseph Ziem and Fati Alhassan.
The Authors of this Article are both Freelance Journalists based in Tamale.
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