Common
Agenda, Different Methods: Women’s Use of ICTS in Conflict Situations
By Ruth Ojiambo Ochieng
This paper was presented at the side panel on globalised media and
ICT systems and structures and their interrelationship with fundamentalism
and militarism organised by Isis International-Manila during the WSIS
in Geneva, Switzerland in December 2003.
“If the American
demonstrations are sometimes ignored by their own mainstream media,
who are we, scattered all over villages in Africa, to expect our issues
to attract their screens and cameras?”
This question was
what inspired Isis-Women’s International Cross-Cultural Exchange (Isis-WICCE),
to resort to the convergence of media and communication to advance its
agenda.
Advocacy Stage
The urgent task was to develop mechanisms that would communicate women’s
ideas and allow them to forge solidarity action plans, to exchange information
and strategies despite the challenges before them of poor communication
infrastructure, high level of illiteracy among majority of women and
the conflict situation amidst them. For this to take off, there was
a need for Isis-WICCE to build the capacity of women in using different
ICTs to address their principal problems and to effect change.
This brought about
an effective link between Isis-WICCE, the war survivors and the policy
makers to apply the appropriate communication methods that would generate
disaggregated data, relay their stories, and move each one to take action.
The ICTs were therefore vehicles that stimulated and influenced the
actions of the different stakeholders.
The organisation
prepared women to tell their stories in their own languages and methods,
within their contexts. The tape recorder was the most appropriate tool
because of its simplicity. Many were able to tell their stories.
In the course, the
Isis-WICCE staff realised that key aspects of story telling were being
missed out. The expressions on the survivors’ face, the tears rolling
down their cheeks, the mutilated parts of their bodies—none of these
could be part of their stories. It was important to expose these visual
magnitude of pain, to which mainstream media was mostly indifferent.
The video camera became handy at this point. It became a powerful tool
to project women’s suffering—physical, mental, psychological and economic.
Their expressions on video brought the organisation to the next step,
the formulation of an action and sustainability strategy.
Action and Sustainability Strategy
As the saying goes, seeing is believing. The audio and visuals drove
different actors to take action. The story of a young woman who leaked
urine and faeces for 14 years made activists and policy makers react
differently. For the gynaecologists, the agenda was to rectify the problem.
Indeed they did! A woman who could not step out of her homestead for
14 years was able to say, “At least I can now interact with others…I
can walk around, go to church without smelling.”
Inviting the “powers
that be”, to be part of the strategy of launching of these findings
was a useful strategy for long-term interventions. During such workshops,
survivors were invited to tell their stories (using the person-to-person
medium of communication).
The women’s own
telling of the stories named and shamed the very systems expected to
provide them security and better their lives. This prompted some of
them, mostly government workers, to take action. Few women who never
dreamt of safe shelter received materials and today have a roof above
their heads. ICT tools are indeed powerful and could clarify the real
value of women.
We also involved
mission representatives and members of the diplomatic community who
showed sympathy and volunteered their assistance. For example, we invited
the Ambassador of the Republic of Germany to launch one of the reports,
who then released about US$40,000 to provide basic needs of internally
displaced persons.
Telling their stories
in front of a camera was in itself empowering for the survivors of armed
conflict. The support from UNIFEM to the documentary “A Lingering Pain”
brought these survivors, their war-torn places of origin, and their
refugee camps to TV and radio. Their pains were no longer hidden but
became topics of discussion by ordinary Ugandans, human rights activists,
as well as the UN Security Council.
The unknown conflict
became known worldwide. Many actors influenced policy makers at different
levels for legal reforms to improve the women’s conditions. It became
known that apart from rape, women suffered numerous gender-specific
and non-specific violations. The organisation’s link to more than 2,000
networks worldwide made the sharing of this information (through the
Internet) timely. For example, the International Women’s Tribune Centre
(IWTC) was able to request the UN Security Council to discuss the conflict
in Uganda on the way to the Democratic Republic of Congo. Our other
partners such as the Association for Progressive Communicators, FEMNET,
Isis International-Manila used the same information to articulate the
issues of women and conflict at different levels of governance.
Knowing the power
of drama to most communities in the Africa, Isis-WICCE continued to
build the capacity of women to use drama to sensitise, educate and raise
awareness of the ills of war. It has remained a tool in these women’s
search for peace.
Recommendations
But there are still systems at play to challenge, including globalisation,
militarisation and the different fundamentalisms that my colleagues
(in this forum) have explained. We need to assess and reassess women’s
methods of using ICTs, instead of letting the global few dictate their
ideas on how we should proceed. We need to address the question of access
to technology, especially for women in remote areas. The World Summit
on the Information Society (WSIS) has to realise that Africa will benefit
from information-society initiatives only if the process addresses the
needs of the majority. This is the only way the global village will
become truly global. Otherwise, it becomes the information society of
the minority.
It is imperative
to involve the women in determining how they want to communicate, what
they want to communicate, and where they want to communicate. The focus
should not always be on globalised media, which does not always make
sense to majority who are out of reach. Globalised media may be the
way for some of us, but not for all of us.
It is important
that approaches to communication are sensitive to all the different
ways people communicate. It is also important that the training provided
is what the beneficiaries require, and not the training we think they
require. Therefore, all proponents of gender mainstreaming policy should
not only include the word ‘”gender” in policy documents but enforce
a gender perspective, if the marginalised, particularly women, are to
benefit from the process.
Considering the
numerous gender issues that affect women’s access and use the ICTs for
development, there must be a choice of what technology to use, especially
for the poor, isolated and illiterate, for obvious reasons.
There must be consultations
with these vulnerable groups on how, to whom, and what they want to
communicate. Only through this approach will they be able to develop
their own content relevant to their needs.
Although governments
such as Uganda propose to focus on human capacity building, it is evident
that such initiative are still urban-based and mainly in rich, established
schools. The costs of improving one’s skills in accessing communication
services are way beyond the capacity of the majority poor in the rural
communities. It is important, therefore, to address the issues of learning
and organisational development to help each sector develop human capacity.
Although there has
been response by some public, regulatory and license regimes to extend
ICT services to rural areas, the delivery of such must tally with the
people’s needs and ability to pay. What seems to be the advocacy now
is the distribution of the new technologies, without taking into account
usage by the majority. There is more of a macro level approach to infrastructure
development and less consideration of micro utilisation and needs. This
perpetuates the digital divide and isolation of the poor communities.
On the other hand,
the resources for the development of the information society seem to
concentrate on access to new technologies, without addressing the gender
issues that continue to hinder marginalised women from accessing the
technology for their empowerment. It is important that this be addressed.
Information and
communication policies must be people-centred for these to have meaning.
Government and the private sector in our respective countries must learn
to appreciate individual and societal ways of communicating.
Ruth Ojiambo
Ochieng is the Executive Director of Isis-Women’s International Cross-Cultural
Exchange (WICCE).
Also in this issue:
Globalisation and Media: Making Feminist Sense
IT in India: Social Revolution or Approaching
Implosion?
When Technology, Media and Globalisation Conspire:
Old Threats, New Prospects
False and Real Differences:Alternative and Mainstream
Media in Latin America
Choices We (Must) Make For Ourselves: Women and
Transnational Media
Media and ICT Systems, Globalisation, Militarism
and Fundamentalisms
Knowledge Economy: Does It Come with a Knowledge
Society?
Recalling the Past, Looking to the Future
WILMA: Making a Difference
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