Out of 53 members states of the African Union only 26 submitted reports on the Solemn Declaration. Among those who have submitted were
South Africa, Nambia and Senegal , madam Jeanne Flora Kayites, programme officer , women’s right(AUC) African Union commission , gender directorates was delivering a paper at a workshop on human rights education for west Africa in Banjul The Gambia.
Kayitesi , speaking on the second day of the workshop on 15 April 2008, told participants that AU solemn declaration on gender equality in
The commission of the African Union , in collaboration with the African Commission on human and People’s Rights and Economic Commission for Africa , organize a workshop on women’s rights through education , from 14th -16th April 2008, in
There is an international consensus that human rights education makes a fundamental contribution to the realization of human rights .Human rights education aims at developing a common understanding of the responsibility to make human rights a reality in every community and society at large .
On 10 December 2004, the General Assembly of the United Nations proclaimed the World Programme for Human Rights Education (WPHRE), which began on 1st January 2005, with first phase running from 2005-2007. This programme is a follow –up to the United Nations Decade for human rights education which ran from 1995 to 2004.
The regional decade review of the
At the Continental level , the Heads of States and Government Solemn Declaration on Gender Equality in Africa and the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa enshrine numerous commitments of African leaders to the protection of the rights of women and girls , to gender equality and to women’s empowerments in all sector.
Measures protecting women against violence especially domestic violence are in place in several countries . However , the Regional Review indicated that despite these successes , the
A number of strategies have been formulated to address the large gap between de jure and Dakar Platforms for action and most international and regional instruments pay attention to the role of education in promoting women’s rights . “Provision of human rights education is essential for promoting an understanding of the rights of women, including knowledge of recourse mechanisms to redress violation of their rights”(Beijing Platform for Action, Para.227). Schools are widely recognized as important sites for learning about gender equality, and education and can be a key for change towards a gender equality culture. Human rights education and gender sensitization at all levels are a critical dimension of a rights-based approach. In many countries , there have also been sustained efforts to promote gender equality in the curricula .
The promotion and protection of human rights, including gender equality, is an integral part of the African Union Constitutive Act and the African Union has adopted various instruments , declarations and decisions on human rights. In particular , the Constitutive Act provides for promotion and protection of human rights accordance with the African charter on Human and People’s Rights and other relevant human rights instruments Act 3(h) . The Protocol on the Rights of Women in Africa provides for States parties to take specific position action to promote literacy among women; education and training for women at all levels ad in all discipline particularly in the fields of science and technology ; promote the enrolment and retention of girls in schools are other training institutions and the organization of programmes for women who leave school prematurely , Act . 12(2). The African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the child provides that every child shall have the right to education Act.11(1).
In October 2005, the African Union , in collaboration with Economic Commission for Africa and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, organized in Kigali, Rwanda, a sub-regional workshop for east African Countries on the “Realization of women ‘s Rights through Human Rights Education” This was followed by similar workshop for North African Countries. These workshops were attended by government officials, National Human Rights Institutions, Civil Society Organizations and UN Agencies . It is the African Union’s desire to organize a similar workshop in all the regions of