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Women, children must be represented at national level – AFRIWOCC

Participants at the maiden edition of the Africa Women and Children Con­ference (AFRIWOCC) in Accra have urged African nations to en­sure that their delegates to climate change conferences are gender bal­anced, with female representatives who understand the issues at play.

According to them, Women and children must first be represented at national-level discussions for their voices to be heard interna­tionally.

This was contained in an eight-point communique issued at the end of a two-day AFRIWOCC, an initiative by the Second Lady, Mrs Samira Bawumia.

It was to deliberate on practical and realistic programmes to ad­dress the adverse effects of climate change on women and children.

The conference document­ed indigenous knowledge and innovation in climate change; and has set the pace to coordinate a network of organisations focused on women.

It also brought together ap­proximately 450 participants from across Africa and held on the theme; ‘Amplifying the Voices of Women and Children in Climate Action.’

The communique said countries should adopt indigenous and lo­cally-led interventions that can be implemented at the grassroots with little technology and training.

It also called for effective capac­ity building, awareness creation, training, and education for all stakeholders needed to achieve desired climate action outcomes that positively influence women and children.

“Traditional authorities, partic­ularly women leaders, must be in­volved in climate mitigation given their significant standing in com­munity governance and processes, governments must ensure that policies have holistic, coherent, and aligned messaging on women and children’s issues and ensure inclu­sive climate action,” it said.

Additionally, it advocated that climate education be integrated into teacher training curricula prior to enable them to create general awareness of climate change in un­derstandable and relatable language relevant to the African context to their students.

Earlier during the opening, Mrs Bawumia called on stakeholders to make conscious and deliberate efforts to create a space for women and young people’s voices especial­ly on climate change to be heard.

“You cannot make progress without leveraging the full resourc­es of the majority of our popula­tion who are women and children especially in decision making,” she said.

According to her, climate change was increasingly inducing migra­tion and heightening political in­security threats across the sub-re­gion, further impacting economic stability, especially of women and children.

She said climate action must be “holistic, inclusive and intersec­tional” in addressing the diversities and challenges faced by all espe­cially women and children from different backgrounds, including those in rural areas, urban centres, indigenous communities and per­sons with disabilities.

 BY AGNES OPOKU SARPONG

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