EFF STATEMENT ON WOMENS DAY
09 August, 2016
The EFF marks the 60th Anniversary of the Women's March against pass laws under the murderous apartheid regime. More than 20 000 women, led by Lilian Ngoyi, Helen Joseph, Rahima Moosa, Sophia Williams and Frances Barde staged a protest against the regime on this day in 1956, chanting "Wathint'Abafazi Wathint'imbokodo!".
60 years later, women in our country still find themselves restricted and unsafe in our communities. As a point of departure, the levels of violence against women in both domestic and public spaces reproduce the restrictions on their freedoms that the pass laws represented. It is a fact that rape is still the patriarchal tool to shame, silence and reduce women as simply subservient to men.
South African society has not reflected on the objectification of women and their treatment as mere object of sexual desire. We have not reflected on women's image as tools of beauty to be consumed in a society dominated by patriarchal men. Society has not transcended the reality that women are more than their looks, and the reduction to their bodies constitute the basis for why they are abused and silenced.
Economically, women still earn far less than their male counterparts for the same jobs that they do. This is despite the fact that in many matric results, the girl child performs better than the boy child. This proves that the salary inequalities have no basis in actual intellectual performance, but the fact that they are women. In rural South Africa, women are not allowed to own land, which restricts access to break from the cycles of poverty and landlessness in their lives.