PROTOCOL TO THE AFRICAN
CHARTER ON HUMAN AND PEOPLES' RIGHTS
ON THE RIGHTS OF WOMEN IN
AFRICA
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The States Parties to this Protocol,
CONSIDERING that Article 66 of the African Charter on Human
and Peoples' Rights provides for special protocols or agreements,
if necessary, to supplement the provisions of the African Charter,
and that the Assembly of Heads of State and Government of the
Organization of African Unity meeting in its Thirty-first Ordinary
Session in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in June 1995, endorsed by resolution
AHG/Res.240 (XXXI) the recommendation of the African Commission
on Human and Peoples' Rights to elaborate a Protocol on the Rights
of Women in Africa;
CONSIDERING that Article 2 of the African Charter
on Human and Peoples' Rights enshrines the principle of non-discrimination
on the grounds of race, ethnic group, colour, sex, language, religion,
political or any other opinion, national and social origin, fortune,
birth or other status;
FURTHER CONSIDERING that Article 18 of the African
Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights calls on all States Parties
to eliminate every discrimination against women and to ensure
the protection of the rights of women as stipulated in international
declarations and conventions;
NOTING that Articles 60 and 61 of the African
Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights recognise regional and international
human rights instruments and African practices consistent with
international norms on human and peoples' rights as being important
reference points for the application and interpretation of the
African Charter;
RECALLING that women's rights have been recognised
and guaranteed in all international human rights instruments,
notably the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women and its
Optional Protocol, the 2 African Charter on the Rights and Welfare
of the Child, and all other international and regional conventions
and covenants relating to the rights of women as being inalienable,
interdependent and indivisible human rights;
NOTING that women's rights and women's essential
role in development, have been reaffirmed in the United Nations
Plans of Action on the Environment and Development in 1992, on
Human Rights in 1993, on Population and Development in 1994 and
on Social Development in 1995;
RECALLING ALSO United Nations Security Council’s
Resolution 1325 (2000) on the role of Women in promoting peace
and security;
REAFFIRMING the principle of promoting gender
equality as enshrined in the Constitutive Act of the African Union
as well as the New Partnership for Africa’s Development,
relevant Declarations, Resolutions and Decisions, which underline
the commitment of the African States to ensure the full participation
of African women as
equal partners in Africa’s development;
FURTHER NOTING that the African Platform for
Action and the Dakar Declaration of 1994 and the Beijing Platform
for Action of 1995 call on all Member States of the United Nations,
which have made a solemn commitment to implement them, to take
concrete steps to give greater attention to the human rights of
women in order to eliminate all forms of discrimination and of
gender-based violence against women;
RECOGNISING the crucial role of women in the
preservation of African values based on the principles of equality,
peace, freedom, dignity, justice, solidarity and democracy;
BEARING IN MIND related Resolutions, Declarations,
Recommendations, Decisions, Conventions and other Regional and
Sub-Regional Instruments aimed at eliminating all forms of discrimination
and at promoting equality between women and men;
CONCERNED that despite the ratification of the
African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights and other international
human rights instruments by the majority of States Parties, and
their solemn 3 commitment to eliminate all forms of discrimination
and harmful practices against women, women in Africa still continue
to be victims of discrimination and harmful practices;
FIRMLY CONVINCED that any practice that hinders or endangers the normal growth
and affects the physical and psychological development of women
and girls should be condemned and eliminated;
DETERMINED to
ensure that the rights of women are promoted, realised and protected
in order to enable them to enjoy fully all their human rights;