The Kampala Commitments on AIDS and Gender Inequality
The Hunger Project’s Meeting on “AIDS and Gender Inequality: Action at the
Grassroots” – March 9-10, 2002, Nile International Conference Center, Kampala
More than 60 Hunger Project leaders and other experts from
eight African nations took “personal and collective” responsibility for
commitments aimed at transforming the condition of gender inequality that fuels
the rapid spread of HIV/AIDS.
In the two-day meeting, participants examined traditional
gender roles in African society. On the second day, women and men met
separately to redefine who they need to be as women and men in the 21st
century, and to create commitments consistent with that redefinition. They then
came together and created a shared program of action to make their commitments
a reality.
Commitments of the men
As men, we recognize that it is our behavior that is driving
the spread of HIV/AIDS, and we therefore must act. We take personal and
collective responsibility for the following commitments. We promise:
·
To take action to stop the spread of HIV/AIDS.
·
To respect and defend the rights of every woman.
·
To contribute to changing harmful attitudes which
threaten everyone’s health.
·
To undertake an “outreach crusade” to other men
concerning the rights of women.
·
To work to suppress ignorance in general and create
awareness of the existing rights of women.
·
To promote openness in discussing sexuality in the
family.
·
To stop violence against women.
·
To oppose unsafe sexual practices of every kind.
·
To oppose cultural influences which degrade and
objectify women.
·
To promote sex education for boys and girls.
·
To make progress in our society by renouncing all
advantages over women that the culture gives men – in the spheres of economics,
sexuality and decision making – and to work to have other men do the same.
·
To work to eliminate harmful customs that contribute to
the spread of HIV/AIDS.
·
To raise boys to respect girls and women.
·
To be a good role model in society.
·
To promote the leadership of women in all forums.
·
To share in the responsibility of care and support for
people living with HIV/AIDS.
·
To challenge myself to be healthy and respect the
health of others.
Commitments of the women
As a woman, I commit myself:
·
To include a gender approach in children’s (boys and
girls) education and upbringing in the household, schools and the community.
·
To increase communication on sex with children,
partners, family and the community.
·
To build the community’s capacity to support people
living with HIV/AIDS.
·
To advocate for the rights of people living with
HIV/AIDS.
·
To ensure access to clear and correct information on
HIV/AIDS, Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs), gender and violence.
·
To value women and girls through building solidarity
between girls and women, increasing self-esteem of girls and women, while
maintaining equal respect for men in society.
·
To be assertive and to take responsibility for myself.
·
To break the silence, and fight against any form of
violence against women, including sexual abuse.
·
To increase the economic empowerment of women.
·
To develop and support women in leadership and politics
at all levels.
·
To promote the prevention of mother-to-child
transmission of HIV/AIDS.
·
To recognize gender inequality in every domain.
·
To influence policies on all levels that affect women
(eg, policies on HIV/AIDS).
·
To encourage women and girls to take care of their
bodies and have access to medical services.
In reviewing the commitments together, both women and men
committed themselves to living these
commitments, and to having compassion for themselves and each other as they
strive to do so.
Plan of action
The central purpose of the two-day conference was to create
and launch a new workshop – The Hunger Project’s AIDS and Gender Inequality
Workshop – as an integral component of all its grassroots work for the end of
hunger across Africa.
The new workshop starts off by providing people with clear,
accurate information about HIV/AIDS and how to protect against it. The workshop
then confronts the question – why is it that, even with awareness, people
engage in sexual behavior that puts them at risk to being infected with HIV.
The workshop enables people to examine the age-old gender roles that deny women
the power to negotiate sex, and which encourage men to engage in risky sexual
practices. Participants then create new definitions of who they will be now – as women and men in the 21st
century, and as human beings with full and equal rights. Finally, communities
will create their own action programs to transform attitudes and behaviors, and
to put in place structures to reinforce behavioral change.
The AIDS and Gender Inequality Workshop will be conducted
for the hundreds of villages where The Hunger Project works in Benin, Burkina
Faso, Ghana, Malawi, Mozambique, Senegal and Uganda. In addition, The Hunger
Project will work in partnership with other organizations – many of which
participated in the Kampala meeting – to achieve far greater impact.