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Kagame rallies women to champion peace

Published:Tuesday | June 21, 2022 | 12:12 AMGlory Iribagiza/Contributor
Indian and  Pakistani delegates pose for a photo with flags at the Commonwealth Youth Forum in Kigali on June 20, 2022.
Indian and Pakistani delegates pose for a photo with flags at the Commonwealth Youth Forum in Kigali on June 20, 2022.
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(New Times Rwanda for The Gleaner):

Women and girls have been urged to recast stereotypes of themselves as victims of violence and become front-line defenders of lasting peace between nations, Rwanda First Lady Jeannette Kagame said on Monday.

The first lady took the audience down memory lane on how Rwanda’s path in reconstruction, after the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi, was littered with the pain of fragmented families and of wounded and traumatised women, yet the nation now leads as a champion of women’s empowerment.

“The 2022 Kigali CHOGM (Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting) Women’s Forum does not just occur in a country that consistently pushes for the emergence and recognition of women in leadership,” she said at the opening session of the Commonwealth Women’s Forum in Kigali.

Kagame added: “It occurs in a country where rape was used barely three decades ago as a weapon of war. Today, Rwanda is ranked by the World Economic Forum as the seventh country in the world for closing the gender gap.”

She said Rwanda considers peace and security a condition for the attainment of sustainable development and that the lessons learned can combat existing challenges affecting women and girls.

“The role played by women in peace building has been the cornerstone of Rwanda’s development. We, too, can adopt our strategies for accelerated progress, our service provision, our collaboration frameworks, our militancy and advocacy, our education and research, and every tool in the arsenal which will combat gender inequality,” she said.

Patricia Scotland, QC, the secretary general of the Commonwealth, said the bloc’s “advantage” is enough to achieve set goals in gender equality and women’s empowerment.

“Our similar systems of democratic governance, of common law, of common language, of compatible institutions drive progress for which we all hunger and thirst,” Scotland said.

More than 500 delegates are attending the Commonwealth Women’s Forum where they’re discussing solutions to address pressing challenges affecting women and girls across the Commonwealth, with a view to ensure that member countries have robust policies and programmes to meet gender equality targets by 2030.

The forum, which is taking place in Africa for the very first time, is running under the theme ‘Delivering a Common Future: Transforming Gender Equality’.

It’s one of a series of events that took place on the first day of the 26th edition of CHOGM.

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