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Beyond Legal Measures: A Review of the DRC's Initial Report under the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2023

Trésor Muhindo Makunya*
Affiliation:
University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa University of Goma, Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa (Maputo Protocol) established a reporting process to monitor compliance. Despite its shortcomings, this process provides an opportunity for states to engage in a frank, constructive and open dialogue with the African Commission on the measures they have adopted to realize women's rights and the challenges they face. The DRC's initial report on implementing the Maputo Protocol provides an opportunity to assess how the country has advanced women's rights. This article notes that the DRC has adopted legislation and policies to comply with some of its obligations under the protocol. However, these have not brought about much transformation in terms of effective enjoyment of rights due to the contested nature of many women's rights and the community's patriarchal mindset. The article argues that states should focus on extra-legal measures that can counteract negative attitudes and beliefs towards women's rights.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of SOAS University of London

Introduction

The obligation imposed on state parties to report on the progress made and challenges faced in realizing human rights is a salient feature of international human rights treaties.Footnote 1 The presentation of state reports and their consideration by human rights bodies play a critical role in ensuring regular appraisal of the promise made by states to improve human rights. The state reporting process seeks to ensure that states’ human rights obligations are implemented, complied with and enforced.Footnote 2 It aims to foster internal and external scrutiny of a country's human rights record,Footnote 3 and allows human rights stakeholders to engage in “constructive dialogue”, which reduces hostile confrontation between the monitoring body and states.Footnote 4 It is because states often avoid confronting their human rights record that a mechanism founded on mutual collaboration and dialogue was established to monitor human rights compliance.Footnote 5 State reporting enables the state to reaffirm its commitment to human rights ideals, undergo scrutiny, and receive support from other national and international human rights actors. It is an opportunity to improve human rights protection in the country.

The state is free to decide which of its institutions will develop and submit initial and periodic reports before human rights bodies. In practice, the ministry dealing with human rights, justice, the interior, foreign affairs or women's issues generally performs that role in the African context, with the support of relevant government institutions.Footnote 6 If the entire reporting process is left to state organs alone, they may present a sanitized picture of the state's human rights achievements that barely reflects reality.Footnote 7 Therefore, human rights monitoring bodies require that the drafting of the state report includes government departments, and national and international civil society organizations (CSOs) involved in protecting and promoting human rights.Footnote 8 In addition, they provide clear guidance on the type of measures states must adopt. For example, the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (African Commission) urges states to explain the progress realized, the level to which rights have been implemented and whether individuals are fulfilling their duties.Footnote 9 Interested parties, such as CSOs, can challenge the accuracy of state information or complement it by submitting shadow reports that contain empirical data to guide the African Commission when it examines state reports.Footnote 10 Part of these reports may aim to explain how states did or did not realize the rights of vulnerable categories, understood to be groups of persons (such as indigenous populations)Footnote 11 most likely to suffer or experience harm due to, inter alia, their social status, and economic and historic conditions.Footnote 12 In effect, the domestic organ in charge of state reporting must ensure that the report provides a holistic, objective and frank picture of the human rights situation in the country.

However, this picture must not merely provide an account of legislation adopted or bills the government has introduced to realize its obligations under the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa (Maputo Protocol).Footnote 13 To guarantee the rights of women effectively, it is widely recognized that non-legal measures (such as awareness-raising and the education of community members) should complement states’ legislative, judicial and administrative efforts.Footnote 14 This is because human rights regimes and the drafting of human rights norms, particularly those relating to women and children, are alien to many communities and somewhat antithetical to local practices in Africa.Footnote 15 The tension that characterizes liberal human rights standards protecting women, and the retrogressive and harmful practices tolerated in the name of culture, religion and tradition in most parts of Africa, also show the limits of legislation and policies in ameliorating the lived realities of women on the continent.Footnote 16 It is through knowledge dissemination that a state can obtain the community buy-in to realizing the rights in the Maputo Protocol. This position is valid to a large extent for many African countries, including the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), given that the 2006 DRC Constitution (the Constitution), which preceded ratification of the Maputo Protocol, already contains rules and principles that, if implemented, could enhance women's rights.Footnote 17

This article examines the extent to which measures adopted by the DRC to realize rights recognized under the Maputo Protocol actually advance women's rights.Footnote 18 It assesses the nature and type of legal and extra-legal measures the DRC has adopted pursuant to article 26(1) of the protocol. This provision, read together with article 62 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (African Charter), enjoins states to report, every two years, on legislative and other measures they have put in place to realize women's rights.Footnote 19 In 2009, the African Commission adopted Guidelines for State Reporting under the Maputo Protocol (2009 Guidelines) to indicate the legislative, judicial, administrative and other measures states must adopt to fulfil their reporting obligations. The contested nature of some women's rights calls for states to complement the adoption of legislation and policies with relevant extra-legal measures for the greater realization of women's rights.Footnote 20 Extra-legal measures may reduce existing tensions around the “radical provisions of the African Women's Protocol”,Footnote 21 such as safe abortion, political participation and domestic violence.

Two reasons provide ample justification for this article. First, the dearth of research on state reporting under the Maputo Protocol, in particular, scholarship that tackles, through a case study analysis, how the reporting mechanism has or has not strengthened the promotion and protection of women's rights, and furthered constructive dialogue among women's human rights stakeholders.Footnote 22 Scholarly evaluation of state reports using empirical information will assist the African Commission in reviewing state compliance with the Maputo Protocol. This is notwithstanding that states are failing to submit their initial or periodic reports. Over half of the 42 states that by September 2022 had ratified the protocol have failed to comply with their reporting obligations.Footnote 23 Secondly, evaluating the initial reports, submitted ten years after a country has ratified the Maputo Protocol, provides an opportunity to understand how women's rights are being realized.Footnote 24 Informed by empirical reasons, this article selects five rights to examine: access to justice; political participation; harmful practices; protection of women against domestic violence; and safe abortion. The aim is first to explore rights that are an innovation of the Maputo Protocol (such as the freedom from all forms of violence, including domestic violence, and the right to medical abortion) and, secondly, to discuss the rights that remain controversial in Congolese society, in particular the right to safe abortion.

The next section of this article provides a background to the ratification of the Maputo Protocol, highlighting the rationale behind its ratification by DRC. The article then offers a brief overview of issues arising from consideration of the DRC's initial report and its drafting process. It then analyses the realization of the five selected rights by emphasising the nature and type of extra-legal measures states must adopt for their full realization. In conclusion, the article shows that the DRC's focus on legislation and policies to comply with the Maputo Protocol has not brought about much transformation in terms of women's effective enjoyment of rights. This is due to the contested nature of many rights, the patriarchal mindset, and the conservative attitude of the community at large towards women's rights.Footnote 25

Background to the ratification of the Maputo Protocol

The DRC signed the Maputo Protocol in December 2003, ratified it in July 2008 and deposited the instrument of ratification in February 2009.Footnote 26 The ratification was preceded by parliamentary approval of the Maputo Protocol in 2006 and the authorization to ratify it as contemplated under article 214(1) of the Constitution.Footnote 27 The Maputo Protocol was published in the Official Gazette in March 2018.Footnote 28 It thus forms part of the DRC's domestic law.Footnote 29

The signing of the Maputo Protocol coincided with the settlement in 2003 of the political and military crises that had split the country into three parts for almost half a decade.Footnote 30 Ratification was supported by the commitment of participants in the Inter-Congolese Dialogue (DIC) and the government to improve the plight of women, combat sexual violenceFootnote 31 and enable women's political participation at all levels of decision-making.Footnote 32 The active participation of women during the DIC facilitated the consideration of women's human rights issues during the negotiations.Footnote 33 The DRC, as a country transitioning to democracy, seems to have adhered to the values and standards encapsulated in the Maputo Protocol in showing its willingness to protect women.Footnote 34 The ratification of the Maputo Protocol also responded to demands by national and international human rights activists for the adoption of a legal framework to protect various women's rights.Footnote 35 The Maputo Protocol complements domestic standards on the protection of women's rights and constitutes the benchmark against which the effectiveness of domestic laws at protecting women's rights can be assessed.Footnote 36

However, the process of ratification faced resistance, as some religious and political groups believed the Maputo Protocol could be used to allow abortion under any circumstances.Footnote 37 Through its not for profit organizations, the Catholic Church spearheaded the resistance on account that faith and culture prevent the suppression of innocent life.Footnote 38 As a consequence, academics, law students and the population at large strongly criticized the right to safe abortion, which they regarded as being pervasive, and advocated that some ground-breaking provisions that empower women in the community (for example in the political sphere) be set aside.Footnote 39 The activism against the ratification of the Maputo Protocol also created a distorted view of what it seeks to achieve. This article emphasizes the role that extra-legal measures can play to change this misleading understanding, by presenting other protections that the Maputo Protocol offers to improve women's rights, starting with how the DRC should fulfil its reporting obligations.

A brief overview of issues arising from consideration of the DRC Report and the drafting process

The report the DRC submitted to the African Commission in 2017 (the DRC Report)Footnote 40 was both an initial and combined periodic report. The DRC is one of 21 state parties to the Maputo Protocol that have, as of April 2023, complied with their reporting obligations.Footnote 41 The DRC Report was considered at the African Commission's 61st ordinary session, which took place from 1–15 November 2017 in The Gambia.Footnote 42 The concluding observations were however only adopted two years later at the African Commission's 65th ordinary session held from 21 October to 10 November 2019.Footnote 43 Given that concluding observations help countries to improve their human rights track records by highlighting factors that hinder the realization of women's rights and areas of concern, they should be adopted and published timeously. This can help states to address issues requiring improvement and to receive necessary support from national and international women's rights actors. Adopting concluding observations at almost the same time as another state report is due may impede the effective redress of issues raised in the previous report. However, states can partly be blamed for the late adoption of concluding observations, especially when they delay responding to the African Commission's follow-up questions.

In any case, the successful drafting of the DRC Report was due to an effective institutional organization and to international support. The African Commission undertook promotional visits to the DRC, during which it reiterated the importance of submitting state reports under the African Charter and the Maputo Protocol.Footnote 44 The government's political commitment and will through its various ministries involved in the reporting process were also critical in facilitating the drafting of the report. In 2009,Footnote 45 the DRC government created the Inter-Ministerial Technical Committee for the Preparation and Monitoring of Initial and Periodic Human Rights Reports (Inter-Ministerial Committee).Footnote 46

However, the drafting of the DRC Report remained state-centred and less inclusive of sub-national entities. According to the report, the process of its preparation involved “civil society organisations including associations and human rights organisations”.Footnote 47 This statement is vague. Although the drafting committee provided names of government departments and organs involved in the reporting process,Footnote 48 it failed to mention the CSOs involved in the process and their geographical reach. The report also failed to mention the focus areas of these CSOs. It further appears that organizations working on the promotion and protection of the rights of women with disabilities and older women, sexual and reproductive health, violence reduction and prevention, the rights of internally displaced women, indigenous women and women living with HIV/AIDS were not consulted. The possible exclusion of such critical stakeholders may indicate that the drafting committee was not equipped with sufficient expertise to report on the realization of the rights of vulnerable women. Furthermore, some members of CSOs involved in the drafting process indicated that the process did not benefit from the expertise of organizations operating outside the capital city, Kinshasa.Footnote 49 The involvement of CSOs based in provinces other than Kinshasa would have diversified the information. Further, although they participated in the drafting process, the representatives of the National Human Rights Commission and the Cadre Permanent de Concertation de la Femme Congolaise [Permanent Consultation Framework for Congolese Women] lamented their exclusion from the final meeting on the adoption of the report before it was submitted to the African Commission.Footnote 50 In a sense, the drafting and adoption of the report were not as inclusive as is presented. The Inter-Ministerial Committee may have ensured that the DRC Report does not contain information that may tarnish the image of the state. If a state has nothing to hide, there is no logical reason to refrain from submitting the final report to entities that participated in its development.

The extent to which selected women's rights have been realized

The main issues addressed in this section are, first, whether (with regard to the rights under study in this section) effective legislative, institutional, administrative and policy frameworks were adopted. Secondly, whether extra-legal measures were taken in terms of sufficient awareness-raising and education around access to justice, political participation, the prohibition of practices harmful to women, domestic violence and the right to safe abortion.

Access to justice including legal aid

Access to justice ensures the protection and realization of many women's rights.Footnote 51 It is an important measure of the rule of law.Footnote 52 The Maputo Protocol requires that women have access to “judicial and legal services”.Footnote 53 Local, national and regional initiatives must be established to help women access justice and strengthen the capacity of law enforcement officials in their understanding, interpretation and enforcement of equality between men and women.Footnote 54 Did the state meet its obligations under article 8 of the Maputo Protocol?

The Constitution establishes, on paper, a solid foundation for equality before the law and equal protection.Footnote 55 Article 14 of the Constitution enjoins the state to eliminate all forms of discrimination against women. Although article 12 on the right to equality and equal protection does not make specific provision regarding women, the non-discrimination clause requires that women and men are treated equally.Footnote 56 Given that men and women enjoy the right to be heard by a competent judge within a reasonable time, it is clear that women have a constitutional right to an effective remedy.Footnote 57 However, one of the key issues facing women or disproportionately affecting them, is the lack of adequate means to access justice effectively. The obligation on litigants to pay administrative fees to institute lawsuits hampers women's prospects to exercise their right to be heard before competent tribunals.Footnote 58 These fees have been identified as an obstacle to persons living in poverty accessing justice, although tribunals may waive the fees when litigants are indigent.Footnote 59 The Civil Procedure Code provides for conditions under which individuals may be considered as indigent to benefit from the waiver of legal fees, but this is a discretionary power conferred on the president of a tribunal.Footnote 60 There is no guarantee that (female) litigants will have legal assistance should they need it. If one considers the historical marginalization of women and the unequal distribution of resources and power between men and women, it is clear that the absence of a constitutional guarantee on legal assistance and its discretionary nature is likely to deprive women of an effective right of access to justice more than men.Footnote 61 This is particularly true because, except in matters related to sexual violence, obtaining legal assistance may be time-consuming and any assistance may be ineffective.Footnote 62

Various legislation has attempted to strengthen access to justice for women. One relevant act is the 2006 Sexual Violence Act, which criminalizes 14 forms of sexual violence, including rape, forced prostitution, sexual harassment and forced marriage. The adoption of this legislation was accompanied by intensified awareness-raising campaigns led by government organs and CSOs, as well as the enforcement of the act by courts and tribunals.Footnote 63 These efforts enabled victims of sexual violence to have their cases heard by competent tribunals.Footnote 64 Despite such progress, numerous victims of rape and other forms of sexual violence to whom courts have allocated monetary compensation as a remedy rarely cash these sums.Footnote 65 A number of reasons may be invoked. First, victims do not follow-up with the registrar of the court or tribunal to enforce the verdict against the perpetrator.Footnote 66 Secondly, before courts can enforce any criminal or civil-related judgments, including those related to sexual violence, victims are required to pay 10 per cent of the total compensation.Footnote 67 In addition, in cases involving sexual violence committed by soldiers, compensation is generally ordered but not paid by the state as the soldier's employer.Footnote 68

Furthermore, there is an urban and rural divide in accessing justice mechanisms, which the DRC did not report.Footnote 69 Many judicial institutions are located in urban areas. This leaves women and a large segment of the population without proper access to justice.Footnote 70 To circumvent the limited number of courts in rural areas, the judiciary organized mobile courts or audiences. However, mobile courts rely heavily on non-governmental organizations (NGOs) for funding and often prioritize certain types of cases, for example sexual violence-related cases, over others.

Collaboration among government institutions, and international and national NGOs has facilitated awareness-raising campaigns and educative meetings on women's access to justice with youth,Footnote 71 traditional leaders and relevant state officials and security forces.Footnote 72 The establishment of legal clinics by CSOs enabled victims of sexual violence and other acts to be sensitized about their rights and existing legal remedies.Footnote 73 These clinics were not established in many rural areas. If they had been, they could have educated victims of gender-based violence who do not understand legal mechanisms and procedures (such as what a competent tribunal is, what the procedure is to approach it, what the alternative dispute resolution mechanisms are and how to access free legal assistance). Fear of retaliation may also increase the impunity of violators of women's rights.

Political participation and decision-making

The Maputo Protocol and domestic laws have provisions related to women's political participation. Under the protocol, the right to political participation and decision-making is three-tiered: participation in the electoral process without discrimination;Footnote 74 equal representation in the process;Footnote 75 and equal partnership between men and women when establishing and implementing state policies.Footnote 76 The Constitution enjoins the state to safeguard women's full participation in the nation's development process and to ensure equitable representation of women in the national, provincial and local spheres of government.Footnote 77 A myriad of legislative measures have been taken.Footnote 78 Some of the notable ones that deserve examination include the Act on Gender Parity and the electoral act.

It is contended that neither of these laws promotes women's political participation. The provisions of Act 15/013 of 1 August 2015 on Parity between Women and Men do not contain rules that require political parties or state organs to ensure that equality between men and women is enforced. Equally, although the 2017 amendment to the electoral law provides that parties should have male and female candidates, it also admits that the absence of either of the genders on the list does not render the list invalid.Footnote 79 Following a constitutional petition in 2018, the Constitutional Court ruled that article 13 of the electoral law did not uphold inequality. It indicated that:

“[G]ender equality cannot be conceived of either in arithmetic terms or as a mathematical equation, with regard to equal opportunities between men and women, and secondly that commitment to political parties are [sic] free so that the number of women and men actually engaged in the life of political parties is likely to vary from one political party to another and could not be foreseen in advance to render inadmissible lists which would not provide a determined number of seats for women.” Footnote 80

This ruling of the Constitutional Court and the absence of equal representation of women and men in the national and provincial legislative assemblies underscore the patriarchal mindset of the judiciary, legislature and government. Parliament disregarded the National Human Rights Commission's plea to enforce the constitutional requirement of gender representation.Footnote 81 A number of reasons have been proposed to explain why the legislature and the Constitutional Court were reluctant to push for equal representation. It is said that women usually do not engage much in political activities at any level.Footnote 82 A few women candidates are often chosen randomly without any previous political experience. If political parties are forced to have an equal number of male and female candidates on their lists, they might end up failing to find suitable female candidates.Footnote 83 These justifications are generally a result of male chauvinism. In past elections, female candidates were removed from party lists and replaced by male candidates.Footnote 84 There is also growing activism on the part of women politicians, which suggests that their efforts should be bolstered with the removal of legislative and institutional barriers to their participation. Awareness must be raised to overcome cultural and social beliefs that politics is only for men. During the presidential elections in 2006, there were four female candidates; there were none in 2011Footnote 85 and one female candidate in 2018. The reality is alarming with regard to national legislative and provincial elections.Footnote 86

Political party activists, government officials, church and traditional leaders, and members of the rural community should be sensitized for effective implementation of the right to political participation and the presence of women in decision-making processes. These categories of persons wield power to induce a change in their respective level of influence. According to the DRC Report, awareness-raising activities that were organized targeted “political parties and their leaders, journalists, the media, community and opinion leaders in order to incorporate gender, civic and electoral education in their programmes and activities”.Footnote 87 It is unfortunate that there is no mention of statistics regarding activities that were conducted and their geographical reach in the 26 provinces. Since the report itself acknowledges that rural communities have been left behind in many of these activities and in the absence of any numbers, it is therefore questionable whether the government has realized this right holistically.Footnote 88 Moreover, the lack of steps taken to overcome various challenges, as required by the 2009 Guidelines, implies that the burden to conduct awareness-raising campaigns has been left to NGOs alone.

Practices harmful to women

Harmful practices against women are perhaps the most serious infringement of the Maputo Protocol that the government has left unaddressed. Although a definitional issue existed before the adoption of the protocol,Footnote 89 the latter has defined harmful practices broadly to encompass “behaviour, attitudes and / or practices which negatively affect the fundamental rights of women and girls, such as their right to life, health, dignity, education and physical integrity”.Footnote 90 Article 5 of the Maputo Protocol demonstrates that harmful practices cannot be cured by legislative measures alone. It emphasizes the need to educate the public through both formal and informal education channels. States were aware of the possibility that a holistic approach was needed to address harmful practices.

Existing legislation can be said to have curtailed some aspects of harmful practices in the DRC, particularly the two laws on sexual violence that prohibit and criminalize “sexual mutilation, exploitation of minors for purposes of debauchery, pimping, forced prostitution, harassment and sexual slavery, forced marriage, slavery, zoophilia, the deliberate transmission of sexually transmitted infections, child trafficking and exploitation for sexual purposes, pregnancy and forced sterilization, prostitution and pornography involving children”.Footnote 91

The institution of a specific unit within the National Congolese Police, tasked with protecting women and children, contributed to combating impunity for those who conduct or abet harmful practices in the country.Footnote 92 The police approach, however, is more reactive than pre-emptive. To be pre-emptive, it should prevent the occurrence of harmful practices, some of which are supported by customs and traditions. For instance, sexual mutilations are practised by the Ngwaka tribe, in the northern DRC.Footnote 93 The mutilation of the genital parts of survivors of sexual violence is one of the practices perpetrated by rapists.Footnote 94 Conflict-related harmful practices, particularly in areas still controlled by armed groups and where the government does not exercise control, remain pervasive. Some scholars have argued that society does not generally challenge traditional practices that dehumanize women and girls.Footnote 95

Fewer efforts have been made to conduct public awareness through “information, formal and informal education and outreach programmes”.Footnote 96 The DRC Report does not mention any of the activities organized by CSOs in different provinces to change societal perception about harmful practices. Clear government policy and programmes directed to solve, “(i) early marriages of girls, marriage by abduction, (ii) girls dropping out of school, (iii) prostitution of young girls, (iv) sexual violence and abuse of widows”,Footnote 97 and continuous awareness raising would have achieved the goals in the Maputo Protocol.

Domestic violence

In the DRC, seven out of ten women are victims of domestic violence.Footnote 98 Nevertheless, the state has not adopted specific legislative measures,Footnote 99 probably because domestic violence is included in the violent acts criminalized under the Criminal Code as well as in specific laws combating sexual violence.Footnote 100 This approach, however, fails to consider the specific nature of domestic violence. Domestic violence is usually perceived as violence committed under the conjugal roof. Consequently, acts such as “unwanted or forced sex” between partners known as marital rape are rarely prosecuted, as it is believed that rape “primarily happens between strangers” and that it could not occur within a marriage.Footnote 101 These acts are trivialized both by the community and the state, which makes it difficult for victims to report incidents and access justice.Footnote 102 Domestic violence may be psychological, physical, sexual or take the form of discrimination against girls committed in private or public.Footnote 103 The negative effects of this violence require the establishment of a coherent legal and institutional framework to combat them and raise public awareness. The consequences include, but are not limited to, women's impoverishment, sudden death,Footnote 104 physical and psychological trauma, and the woman's lack of control over her body.Footnote 105

From another perspective, it can be argued that the absence of a specific law on domestic violence does not mean that domestic violence cannot be prosecuted under the current legal framework. First, unwanted sex is sanctioned under the provision of rape, whether between married or unmarried couples.Footnote 106 The sanction is between five and 20 years imprisonment, and a fine of CDF 100,000 (approximately USD 50). The accused is not entitled to bail and the prosecutor does not need permission to prosecute the offender.Footnote 107 Secondly, acts of domestic violence falling under sexual slavery,Footnote 108 voluntary transmission of sexually communicable diseases,Footnote 109 forced pregnancyFootnote 110 or sexual harassmentFootnote 111 are also sanctioned under sexual violence laws. Thirdly, other types of non-sexual domestic violence that represent physical or emotional, socio-cultural, professional or institutional violenceFootnote 112 may be prosecuted according to the Penal Code, Child Rights Act, Labour Code or any other relevant laws.

It is relevant to consider fundamental societal attitudes and behaviours that prevent existing sexual violence laws from addressing domestic violence. Otherwise, even a specific law on domestic violence may fail to address the main problems. As the African Commission rightly noted in its concluding observations, “[t]he large proportion of men in the DRC, even among the highly educated ones, do not approve of gender equality and are still so much attached to stereotyping”.Footnote 113 On a positive note, however, the DRC Report indicates that the government is willing to draft a bill on domestic violence. The bill would be informed by the level of trivialization of such violence in the community and the fact that such acts are no longer solely in the private domain.Footnote 114 Such a law would strengthen the existing 2009 National Strategy on Combating Gender-Based Violence by the Ministry of Gender, Family and the Child, which lacks specific directives on domestic violence.Footnote 115 This strategy aims to ensure that laws are enforced to combat the impunity of perpetrators of sexual violence. Given that legal mechanisms do not play a pre-emptive role, the strategy ensures that prevention of and protection from sexual violence are made a priority, and that reforms of the army, police and justice system take the gender dimension into account.Footnote 116 The focus on the army and the police is guided by the belief that these two security sectors are the number one perpetrators of sexual violence. This implies that, unlike what the state claimed in its report, policies still overlook aspects of domestic violence when combating gender-based violence.Footnote 117 Further, the strategy is underpinned by the adoption of the 2009 UN Security Council (UNSC) resolution 1888 to combat sexual violence, particularly that committed during armed conflict.Footnote 118

The absence of a specific law on domestic violence is exacerbated by the scant attention paid to sensitizing the community. The DRC Report does not explain the extent to which the state engaged with community members (religious or traditional leaders, youth, journalists or unions) on possible roles they might play to help women realize their rights. One CSO recommended that women should be sensitized because the persistence of domestic violence could be attributable to their ignorance of their rights and possible legal remedies. Most victims are not aware that acts of domestic violence are sanctioned by the law.Footnote 119 A number of other extra-legal measures were suggested: establishing local committees to protect families in rural areas; conducting studies to understand reasons that inform the persistence of domestic violence; establishing a favourable environment for family members, colleagues and friends to discuss domestic violence; and ensuring the provision of psycho-social support to victims.Footnote 120 The importance of these measures is linked to the nature of domestic violence: it is generally committed in the absence of external witnesses. Empowering victims and the community through knowledge dissemination is perhaps one of the prerequisites for preventing domestic violence.

Provision for safe abortion

The Maputo Protocol enjoins states to adopt necessary measures to “protect the reproductive rights of women by authorizing medical abortion in cases of sexual assault, rape, incest” and in situations where “the continued pregnancy endangers the mental and physical health of the mother or the life of the mother or the foetus”.Footnote 121 Through General Comment No 2 on article 14(1)(a), (b), (c) and (f) and article 14(2)(a) and (c), the African Commission provides guidance to state parties with regard to the nature, extent and scope of the right to safe abortion to facilitate its enforcement and implementation.Footnote 122 Under the Maputo Protocol, states have the obligation to respect, protect, promote and fulfil this right.Footnote 123 As argued by the African Commission, when women are forced to maintain a pregnancy that resulted from rape, incest or sexual assault, they are kept in a constant state of trauma that can affect their mental health.Footnote 124 This provision has met serious challenges, as noted in the DRC Report.

The DRC Report clearly indicates that the state has not taken any legal measures to give effect to the right to medical abortion.Footnote 125 It quotes articles 166 and 167 of the Penal Code, which still criminalize abortion.Footnote 126 The resistance is justified by the need to protect society and this must have been suggested by “discussions, studies and other proposals” that took place before the ratification of the Maputo Protocol.Footnote 127 The only avenue for authorized abortion is when the pregnancy endangers the mental and physical health of the mother, or the life of the mother or the foetus, which reflects one, but not all, of the aspects covered by the Maputo Protocol.Footnote 128 The government's failure to take further steps to legalize safe abortion is based on the understanding by pro-life members of the community that life at any stage should be protected, and rape, incest or sexual assault should not justify depriving a human being of life.

Resistance against article 14 of the Maputo Protocol is largely informed by people's misconception of what the provision entails. The then vice prime minister proposed the decriminalization of abortion to reduce the likelihood of children being abandoned,Footnote 129 but this proposal has not been followed through. According to pro-life campaigners, legalizing abortion will undermine Congolese mores.Footnote 130 Not only can it be argued that such “Congolese mores” do not exist, but the concept itself remains controversial and its content may be subject to change over time and place. The DRC Report does not mention “mores” as a ground on which to reject safe abortion, but rather “philosophical foundations” of the right to procreate and the refusal to procreate.Footnote 131 The unsubstantiated reference to philosophy raises more questions than answers. Regardless of whether one approves or disapproves of the right to safe abortion, it is important to note that the Maputo Protocol is only concerned with pregnancy conceived as a result of sexual assault, rape or incest, and therapeutic abortion.Footnote 132 Interpreting this provision as authorizing persons to abort whenever they so wish is misleading.

There are empirical reasons that warrant the authorization of safe abortion.Footnote 133 Despite its criminalization, abortion has been practised secretly. Reports indicate an increase in foetuses found thrown away by those who have secretly practised unsafe abortion.Footnote 134 Another element to consider is the fate of a child born from rape or sexual assault, considering the number of women who have been raped during armed conflicts. In addition, some have drawn a link between the increase in the rate of maternal death and the prohibition of abortion in the country.Footnote 135 A study by the University of Kinshasa and the Guttmacher Institute estimated that:

“146,713 induced abortions occur every year in Kinshasa, yielding an abortion rate of 56 per 1,000 women aged 15–49. We also calculated that more than 343,000 unintended pregnancies occur annually, resulting in an unintended pregnancy rate of 147 per 1,000 women aged 15–49. Taken together, these findings show that two in five unintended pregnancies end in abortion. Women in Kinshasa are clearly struggling to prevent unintended pregnancies, which often result in unwanted childbearing and abortion.” Footnote 136

In the absence of any government interest in furthering the right provided under article 14(2)(c) of the Maputo Protocol, CSOs have continued to raise awareness of the importance of contraception and family planning methods. Organizations are making efforts to promote legislative reforms to harmonize provisions of the Penal Code and the Maputo Protocol.Footnote 137 However, the government has made no efforts regarding the right to safe abortion.

Conclusion

The several measures adopted by the DRC to advance women's rights demonstrate that the country has made strides since it ratified the Maputo Protocol. For a country that was pejoratively named the capital of rape because of the high number of reported cases of sexual violence,Footnote 138 these efforts indicated the state's willingness to adopt a constitutional and legislative framework to prevent violations of women's rights. The number of laws, institutions and policies the DRC has put in place and the partnership it has developed with national or international organizations on women's rights have started to show the emergence of a political will to improve the lived realities of women. This political will also facilitated a frank and constructive dialogue between the delegation and the African Commission during the presentation of the DRC Report. However, the scrutiny of five selected rights shows several areas of concern.

This article has noted that most of the promises made have not been implemented in practice, and that concrete steps to improve, in reality, the fate of several women have been hindered by a patriarchal attitude towards women's rights.Footnote 139 Men and women have internalized the supposed “inferiority”Footnote 140 of the latter to justify their unequal participation in the conduct of state affairs. State institutions have made few efforts to change this mindset.Footnote 141 While the presentation of the report to the African Commission did foster a constructive dialogue, the DRC focused mainly on legislation and policy. Many of the rights in the Maputo Protocol require the DRC to take additional measures in terms of awareness raising, both in rural and urban areas, and a radical transformation of the educational curricula at primary, secondary and tertiary levels, so that a culture of promoting and protecting women's rights takes hold in everyone's mind. The African Commission's concluding observations also note the dearth of extra-legal measures with respect to rights to political participation and decision-making, safe abortion, protection from domestic violence and access to justice, which are some of the areas where much still needs to be done. Actors involved in promoting and protecting women's rights in the country can leverage the head of state's commitment to appoint women to key government positions to ensure that the promotion and protection of women's rights is prioritized through concrete awareness raising and education activities in urban and rural areas of the country.

Competing interests

None

Footnotes

*

Licence en Droit, LLM LLD (University of Pretoria). Postdoctoral research fellow and publications coordinator, Centre for Human Rights, Faculty of Law, University of Pretoria; associate professor of public law, Faculty of Legal, Political, Administrative Studies and International Relations, Department of Legal Studies, University of Goma. The author wishes to thank Dr Ashwanee Budoo-Scholtz and Marystella Simiyu for their comments on earlier drafts of this article as well as the anonymous reviewers.

References

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27 Act 06/015 of 12 June 2006 Authorising DRC to Ratify the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa.

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29 The Constitution, arts 153(3) and 215. Its direct application in domestic litigation has been met with serious resistance from conservative judges.

30 AMB Mangu “DR Congo: The long road from war to peace and challenges for peaceful transition and national reconstruction’ (2004) 34/2–3 Africa Insight 34.

31 “Report of the mapping exercise documenting the most serious violations of human rights and international humanitarian law committed within the territory of the Democratic Republic of Congo between March 1993 and June 2003” (2010, Office of the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights), paras 606–21 and 312–16, available at: <https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/Documents/Countries/CD/DRC_MAPPING_REPORT_FINAL_EN.pdf> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

32 Global and Inclusive Peace Accord, sec III(1), available (in French) at: <http://www.justiceinfo.net/media/k2/attachments/RDC/Accord_global_transition_rdc_2003.pdf> (last accessed 10 February 2023); NO Rashidi “L'an I de l'Accord Global et Inclusif en République Démocratique du Congo: De la laborieuse mise en place aux incessants atermoiements” [Year one of the Global and Inclusive Agreement in the Democratic Republic of Congo: From laborious implementation to incessant prevarications] (2003–04) L'Afrique des Grands Lacs: Annuaire 110 at 119 and 133; C Odimba, PR Namegabe and JB Nzabandora “La participation des femmes dans les processus de paix et la prise de décision politique en République Démocratique du Congo” [Women's participation in peace processes and political decision-making in the Democratic Republic of Congo] (2012, International Alert) at 38–39, available at: <https://www.international-alert.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/Gender-Political-Equality-DRC-FR-2012.pdf> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

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38 “Kananga: Les parents s'insurgent contre le Protocole de Maputo” [Kananga: Parents protest against the Maputo Protocol] (1 August 2007) Radio Okapi, available at: <https://www.radiookapi.net/sans-categorie/2007/08/01/kananga-les-parents-s%25e2%2580%2599insurgent-contre-le-protocole-de-maputo#:~:text=Cette%20manifestation%20intervient%20le%20jour,pendant%20plus%20de%203%20heures.> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

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41 In March 2023 and June 2022, Zambia and Mauritania submitted their respective reports. See generally “50th and 51st combined activity reports”, above at note 23 at 9.

42 “43rd activity report of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights” (June to 15 November 2017) at 5, para 18.

43 “Concluding observations”, above at note 20 at 1. At the time of writing, these concluding observations and recommendations had not yet been published on the African Commission's website.

44 The Commission undertook missions in 2011 and 2016 and discussed the issue of reporting, including the technical support the country needed for such a process.

45 The committee was initially established in 2001, revised in 2007 and then strengthened in 2009.

46 DRC Report, above at note 40 at 28–29, para 104.

47 Id at 4, para 5.

48 Id at 25, paras 79–83.

49 Interview with Mwamba Mushikonkwe, then president of the DRC National Human Rights Commission, Kinshasa, DRC, 14 October 2019.

50 WhatsApp discussion with Rose Mutombo Kiesse, then president of CAFCO, November 2019.

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53 Maputo Protocol, art 8(a).

54 Id, art 8.

55 The Constitution, art 12.

56 Id, art 13.

57 Id, arts 19 and 21.

58 A Meyer Etude sur l'Aide Légale en République Démocratique du Congo [Study on legal aid in the Democratic Republic of Congo] (January 2014, Avocats Sans Frontières) at 17, available at: <https://www.asf.be/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/ASF_RDC_EAL_2013.pdf> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

60 Civil Procedure Code, art 146.

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62 The victim has to be indigent and must hold a certificate from social affairs on their indigency, which they submit to the president of the High Court or the Court of Appeal (depending on the substantive issue). The head of the court will then select one from a number of advocates to plead the case pro bono. The advocate is supposed to be paid by the government, but rarely is. Consequently, the quality of legal assistance is poor. Furthermore, victims are still required to pay some procedural fees, even if they are indigent.

63 DRC Report, above at note 40 at 31, paras 119–22.

65 “RDC: Les victimes des crimes sexuels obtiennent rarement justice et jamais réparation: Changer la donne” [DRC: Victims of sexual crimes rarely get justice and never reparation: The need for a paradigm shift] (2013, Fédération Internationale des Droits de l'Homme) at 59–64, available at: <https://www.fidh.org/IMG/pdf/rapport_rdc.pdf> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

66 T Makunya “Violées oui, indemnisées non!” [Raped but not compensated] in Justice et Droit au Quotidien: Recueil des Articles Publiés dans le Cadre du Projet Contribuer à la Liberté d'Expression en RDC de 2011 à 2013 (2014, RCN Justice & Démocratie) at 109–10.

67 Criminal Procedure Code, art 129; and Civil Procédure Code, art 152; T Kibangula “Viols en RDC: Quand les victimes doivent ‘payer pour obtenir justice’” [Rape in DRC: When victims must ‘pay for justice’] (5 December 2013) JeuneAfrique, available at: <https://www.jeuneafrique.com/166930/politique/viols-en-rdc-quand-les-victimes-doivent-payer-pour-obtenir-justice/> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

68 Act 22/065 on Fundamental Principles on the Protection of Victims of Conflict Related Sexual Violence and Other Serious Crimes Against Peace and the Security of Humankind was promulgated on 26 December 2022. As stated in the preamble to the act, it aims, inter alia, to remove “all conditions related to legal fees and other formalities likely to impede or restrict the exercise and benefit of redress” by victims of sexual violence.

69 Although in para 120 of the DRC Report, the government argues that “it has recruited judges and established magistrates’ courts in all the provinces”, this approach raises a number of issues. First, some crimes cannot be tried by magistrates’ courts as they are beyond their jurisdiction. Secondly, the law provides that magistrates’ courts must be established in all the 27 cities and 145 territories. This has not been done. Thirdly, there are still too few magistrates, despite efforts to recruit 2,000 magistrates and prosecutors in 2010 and 2011.

70 69.24 per cent of Congolese people live in rural areas: DRC Report, above at note 40 at 44, para 208.

71 Within universities, student clubs have been created to disseminate knowledge about certain human rights, particularly those that affect women and girls.

72 DRC Report, above at note 40 at 31, paras 121–22.

73 Id at 31, para 119.

74 Maputo Protocol, art 9(1)(a).

75 Id, art 9(1)(b).

76 Id, art 9(1)(c).

77 The Constitution, art 14.

78 Many of the laws mentioned by the government are not effective on the ground. The 2004 Act on the Organisation and Functioning of Political Parties prohibits any discrimination based on gender; under art 3(5) of Act 08/005 of 10 June 2008 on Public Financing of Political Parties, parties are required to submit lists of candidates, taking account of parity between women and men, before they can be funded. Not only is this provision not implemented by the Electoral Commission, the law on Public Financing of Political Parties has never been enforced.

79 Act 17/013 of 24 December 2017 Amending and Complementing Act 06/006 of 9 March 2006 on the Organisation of Elections, art 13. A new amendment came into force in 2022 but leaves much to be desired with respect to incentives for women's political participation.

80 (Author's translation). Decision R Const 624/630/631 (Constitutional Court) of 30 March 2018. The original French reads: “La Cour considère que l'incise de l'article 13 visé au moyen trouve son explication non point dans une volonté de compromettre le principe de la promotion de la femme proclamé par le constituant, mais uniquement, d'une part dans le fait que l’égalité genre ne peut se concevoir ni en des termes arithmétiques, ni en une équation mathématique, s'agissant d'une égalité de chances entre l'homme et la femme, et d'autre part par le fait que l'engagement dans les partis politiques est libre, en sorte que le nombre de femmes et d'hommes effectivement engagés dans la vie des partis politiques est susceptible de variation d'un parti politique à un autre et ne peut être maitrisé en amont pour justifier l'irrecevabilité de toutes listes qui n'auraient pas prévu un nombre déterminé de sièges aux femmes.”

81 Kahombo, BThe Democratic Republic of the Congo's National Commission on Human Rights” in Fombad, CM (ed) Compendium of Documents on National Human Rights Institutions in Eastern and Southern Africa (2019, Pretoria University Law Press) 101 at 120Google Scholar.

82 Ngemba and Malchiodi Freins à la Participation, above at note 35 at 81 and 171.

83 Kangashe La Constitution Congolaise, above at note 34 at 75.

84 Testimony of a female political candidate during a political campaign session in Bukavu, 2016. See also Ngemba and Malchiodi Freins à la Participation, above at note 35 at 110.

85 “Rapport sur les violences contre les femmes au Nord et Sud-Kivu, en République Démocratique du Congo” [Report on violence against women in North and South Kivu, DRC] (2013) at 5, available at: <https://tbinternet.ohchr.org/Treaties/CEDAW/Shared%20Documents/COD/INT_CEDAW_NGO_COD_13432_F.pdf> (last accessed 28 April 2023).

86 JOM Yahisule Elections et Changement Politique en République Démocratique du Congo: Six Décennies Perdues pour le Développement [Elections and political change in the DRC: Six lost decades for development] (2021, L'Harmattan) at 309.

87 DRC Report, above at note 40 at 33–34, para 135.

88 Id at 44–45, para 208.

89 Yusuf, C and Fessha, YFemale genital mutilation as a human rights issue: Examining the effectiveness of law against female genital mutilation in Tanzania” (2013) 13 African Human Rights Law Journal 356 at 367Google Scholar; Banda, FBuilding a global movement: Violence against women in the African context” (2008) 8 African Human Rights Law Journal 1 at 12–14Google Scholar.

90 Maputo Protocol, preamble, para (g).

91 DRC Report, above at note 40 at 37, para 160.

92 “Avancées et obstacles dans la lutte contre l'impunité des violences sexuelles en République Démocratique du Congo” [Progress and obstacles in the fight against impunity for sexual violence in the DRC] (April 2014, UN Stabilization Mission in the DRC) at 12, available at: <https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Countries/CD/UNJHROApril2014_fr.pdf> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

93 DRC Report, above at note 40 at 37, para 159.

95 Tunamsifu, SPThe right to justice: A challenge of survivors of conflict-related sexual violence in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo” (2015) 15 African Human Rights Law Journal 473 at 475–81CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Kitharidis, SRape as a weapon of war: Combating sexual violence and impunity in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the way forward” (2015) 15 African Human Rights Law Journal 449 at 451–64CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

96 Maputo Protocol, art 5(a).

97 DRC Report, above at note 40 at 37, para 158.

98 “Les violences domestiques à l’égard des femmes en République Démocratique du Congo: Un silence coupable” [Domestic violence against women in the DRC: A culpable silence] (May 2014, Femme au Fone) at 1, available at: <http://deboutcongolaises.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/violences_domestiques_rdc_-Rapport-FemmAuFone.pdf> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

99 DRC Report, above at note 40, para 175.

100 Ibid.

101 D Finkelhor and K Yllo “Rape in marriage: A sociological view” in D Finkelhor et al (eds) The Dark Side of Families: Current Family Violence Research 119 at 121.

102 Ibid.

103 “Les violences domestiques”, above at note 98 at 14.

104 “Congo: Un homme bat sa femme à mort après 2 ans de marriage” [Congo: Man beats wife to death after 2 years of marriage] (15 March 2018) koumpeu.com, available at: <https://koumpeu.com/congo-un-homme-bat-sa-femme-a-mort-apres-2-ans-de-mariage/> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

105 “Les violences domestiques”, above at note 98 at 14.

106 Act 06/018 of 20 July 2006 Modifying and Complementing Decree of 30 January 1940 Relating to the Criminal Code of DRC, art 170.

107 Act 06/019 of 20 July 2006 Modifying and Complementing Decree 06 August 1959 Relating to Criminal Procedure Act, preamble.

108 Act 06/018, above at note 106, art 174(e).

109 Id, art 174(i).

110 Id, art 174(k).

111 Id, art 174(d).

112 These acts are enumerated under the 2009 National Strategy on Combating Gender Based Violence by the Ministry of Gender, Family and the Child (November 2009) at 11–12, available at: <https://monusco.unmissions.org/sites/default/files/old_dnn/PlanNational.pdf> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

113 “Concluding observations and recommendations”, above at note 20 at 31.

114 DRC Report, above at note 40 at 39, para 175.

115 Id at 40, para 176.

116 “Lancement de la Stratégie de Lutte contre les Violences Basées sur le Genre en RDC” [Launch of the Strategy to Fight Gender-Based Violence in the DRC] (25 November 2009) reliefweb, available at: <https://reliefweb.int/report/democratic-republic-congo/lancement-de-la-stratégie-de-lutte-contre-les-violences-basées-sur> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

117 Ibid.

118 Adopted at the UNSC's 6195th session on 30 September 2009. See also UNSC res 1325, adopted at the UNSC's 4213th session on 31 October 2000; UNSC res 1820, adopted at the UNSC's 5916th session on 19 June 2008; and UNSC res 1889, adopted at the UNSC's 6196th session on 5 October 2009.

119 “Les violences domestiques”, above at note 98 at 9.

120 Ibid.

121 Maputo Protocol, art 14(2)(c).

122 General Comment No 2 on Article 14.1 (a), (b), (c) and (f) and Article 14. 2 (a) and (c) of the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa, preamble.

123 Id, para 63.

124 Id, para 37.

125 DRC Report, above at note 40 at 48, para 231.

126 Five to ten years imprisonment for the woman who aborts and five to 15 years for the person who encourages her to abort.

127 DRC Report, above at note 40 at 48, para 231.

128 Id at 48, para 232.

129 Ibid.

130 “Faut-il dépanaliser l'avortement en RDC” [Should abortion be decriminalized in DRC] (8 August 2015) Radio Okapi, available at: <https://www.radiookapi.net/emissions-2/parole-aux-auditeurs/2015/04/15/faut-il-depenaliser-lavortement-en-rdc> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

131 DRC Report, above at note 40 at 48, para 230.

132 Maputo Protocol, art 14(2)(c).

133 Kalonda, JSexual violence in Congo-Kinshasa: Necessity of decriminalizing abortion” (2012) 33 Revue Medicale de Bruxelles 482 at 482–86Google ScholarPubMed.

134 “Bukavu: Un foetus retrouvé sur Avenue Saïo dans la commune d'Ibanda” [Bukavu: A fetus found on Avenue Saïo in the commune of Ibanda] (30 August 2018) La Prunelle.

135 “Clandestine abortion is common in Kinshasa, and procedures are often unsafe” (Guttmacher Institute news release, 7 November 2017), available at: <https://www.guttmacher.org/news-release/2017/clandestine-abortion-common-kinshasa-and-procedures-are-often-unsafe> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

136 S Chae et al “The incidence of induced abortion in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, 2016” (2 October 2017) Plos One, available at: <https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0184389> (last accessed 10 February 2023).

137 The Association of Congolese Women Lawyers is currently exerting pressure on the government to align domestic laws with the Maputo Protocol: Y Amekeya “RDC: Des femmes réclament à legaliser l'avortement” [DRC: Women call for legalized abortion] (5 September 2018) Africa Rdv, available at: <https://www.africardv.com/societe/rdc-des-femmes-reclament-a-legaliser-lavortement/> (last accessed 27 April 2023).

138 C Lewis “The making and re-making of the ‘rape capital of the world’: On colonial durabilities and the politics of sexual violence statistics in DRC” (2021) Critical African Studies 1 at 2–3.

139 “Concluding observations”, above at note 20, para 77(ii).

140 Id, para 77(iii).

141 Id, para 77(ii).