BASIC
COUNTRY INFORMATION
Population, 1999 estimate:�15.5 million
Ethnicities: 31% Cameroon Highlanders; 19% Equatorial Bantu;
11% Kirdi; 10% Fulani; 8% Northwestern Bantu; 7 % Eastern
Nigritic; 13% other African;� less than 1% non-African.
Religion:� 51% indigenous beliefs; 33% Christian; 16% Muslim.
GDP, 1998 estimate:�US$ 29.6 billion
GDP,
real growth rate, 1998 estimate:�5%
GDP
per capita, 1998 estimate:�US$ 2,000
Major
industries:� petroleum production and refining, food processing,
light consumer goods, textiles, lumber.
Population
Growth Rate, 1999 estimate:�2.79%
Infant
mortality rate, 1999 estimate:�75.69 per 1,000 live births
Literacy,
1995 estimate:
�����������
Total:� 63.4%
�����������
Male:�75%
�����������
Female:�52.1%
Primary
School Enrollment Ratio, net, 1997:
�����������
Total (1997): 62%
�����������
Female (1990):�46%
Life
expectancy at birth, 1999 estimate:
�����������
Total:�51.32 years
�����������
Male:�49.75 years
�����������
Female: 52.94 years
Safe
Water , urban population with access, 1997:�71%
Sources:�
1999 World Development Indicators [1] and World Factbook 1999 [2]
Political
History
Cameroon gained independence from France
and Britain in 1960 and remained a one-party state until the
introduction of multipartism in 1992.� The first multiparty
elections, in 1992, were won by president Paul Biya.� Biya
was also declared the winner of the second presidential election
in
1997, which was boycotted by the main opposition
parties and marred by irregularities; international observers
called them flawed and fraudulent.� President Biya and his
circle of advisors largely come from his own Beti ethnic group [3] and his party, the Cameroon People�s
Democratic Movement (CPDM). CPDM also dominates the National
Assembly.� A new Constitution was introduced in 1996, and
the president subsequently amended it to give himself more
control over legislation.
Freedom
of� Expression and Human Rights
Mass
Media
According to a 1999 report by the Committee
to Protect Journalists, journalists who reported on irregularities
and fraud during the October 1997 election have faced harassment,
including criminal defamation charges, arbitrary detention
and death threats.� Some publications, such as popular editor
Pius Njawe�s daily Le Messager and the satirical weekly
Le Messager Popoli, have been banned and seized repeatedly.�
In dealing with instances of corruption by officials, reporters
often choose to practice self-censorship for fear of reprisals.
[4]
Minorities
and Women
Although there is no legal discrimination
against minorities, there have been reports of inferior treatment
of the indigenous Baka (Pygmies), especially in labor practices
and by expulsions by logging companies and security forces
from their lands as response to protests by Pygmies.� There
are tensions between the French majority and the English speaking
Cameroonians, who reside mostly in the Northwestern and Western
part of the country.� The two main religions, Islam and Christianity,
exist alongside traditional animist beliefs. [5]
�Worker Rights
The International Confederation of� Free
Trade Unions (ICFTU) reported in its annual survey that the
government of Cameroon has interfered with independent trade
union activities since 1993, when the national union center
(CCTU) opposed economic austerity measures which had been
negotiated with the IMF.� CCTU has reported that the government
has tried to divide the union by encouraging the creation
of a rival national center in 1995.� The privatization policies
have proceeded. [6]
According to the ICFTU report, Cameroon�s
1991 Exporting Processing Zones (EPZ) exempted employers from
some labor code provisions.� Also, the CCTU reported that
its representatives were denied access to EPZ companies.
Women�s
NGOs
There are several NGOs in Cameroon dedicated
to women�s human rights work, but according to some Cameroonian
women�s human rights activists, these organizations often
lack basic training and knowledge of women�s issues and of
international human rights instruments beyond the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights.� Not only do they lack an understanding
of non-discrimination and equality issues, but they are even
less informed about gender discrimination. Cameroonian women
activists told IWRAW that advocacy is non-existent, and various
organizations mistrust one another and usually do not share
information.� Moreover, according to Pauline Biyong, the president
of the League for Women�s and Children�s Education in Cameroon,
NGOs often lack basic management and accounting skills which
are often required in relations with domestic and foreign
agencies.� Apart from difficulties with securing funding for
NGO work, Biyong� pointed to a disturbing trend in the non-profit
world of setting up NGOs in response to donor programs instead
of developing their own agenda according to the most important
needs first, appealing to donors only secondarily. [7]
This
report was originally written for the review of Cameroon by
the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in November
1999.� It was updated and reformatted for the June 2000� CEDAW
review of Cameroon.� In the preparation of this report, in
addition to books, articles and reports by Equality Now and
Africa-based non-governmental organizations, IWRAW also received
information from several well-informed women�s human rights
activists in Cameroon, some of� whom requested anonymity.
STATUS
OF WOMEN IN CAMEROON UNDER SPECIFIC CEDAW ARTICLES:
CONVENTION
ARTICLE 1
DEFINITION
OF DISCRIMINATION
The Preamble of the Constitution of Cameroon
states that �human beings, without distinction of race, religion,
belief, possess inalienable and sacred rights,� and Article
1(2) ensures equality of all citizens before the law. [8]
Yet, according to women�s human rights activists
whom IWRAW consulted, the unequal status of women and girls
in Cameroon manifests itself in all spheres of life, and there
is no evidence that the government has taken measures to improve
their status.� To the contrary, discriminatory administrative
policies, practices, laws, cultural beliefs and attitudes
hamper the enjoyment of human rights by women.� The Cameroon
government has done little to change these practices and attitudes
against women in direct contravention of Convention Article
5.� Women�s rights activists report that the creation of the
government�s Ministry of Women�s Affairs has not made much
difference, as it has not taken steps to fight the widespread
practices of forced marriage, domestic abuse, female excision
and other traditional discriminatory practices arising out
of customary laws.
CONVENTION
ARTICLE 2
POLICY
MEASURES TO BE TAKEN TO ELIMINATE DISCRIMINATION
IWRAW sources emphasize that more decisive
and effective action is needed to change deep-rooted and culturally
reinforced attitudes. They recommended that the government
provide CEDAW with information on specific programs aimed
at the advancement of women in Cameroon and the budgetary
allocations to the Women�s Affairs Ministry and other programs
seeking equal rights for women. Moreover, some women�s activists,
such as Pauline Biyong, point out that the creation of the
special ministry for women does not mean that issues of equality
should be limited to this body. Women�s status should be considered
by other government organs as well.�� According to Biyong,
�Since women are involved in all sectors, issues affecting
women are therefore present in all sectors.� [9]
According to NGO sources in Cameroon, the
government-created National Human Rights Commission deals
with human rights in general� and does not address issues
of inequality between women and men or discriminatory practices
relating specifically to women.� Additionally, investigation
reports prepared by the Commission are not published; nor
are they made available to the public. [10]
CONVENTION
ARTICLE 7
POLITICAL
AND PUBLIC LIFE
Women in Politics
Women are grossly underrepresented in politics.�
Out of 100 political parties, only one is chaired by a woman.�
Only 10 out of the 180 members of the National Assembly are
women.� There are only three women ministers in the 50-member
Cabinet. All are in departments that traditionally have been
deemed appropriate for women, such as the women�s and social
affairs ministries. [11]
Only 5.3 percent of sub-ministerial level
positions are held by women.� On the local level, there are
no women mayors. [12]
CONVENTION
ARTICLE 9
NATIONALITY
Nationality
Cameroon�s Nationality Law stipulates that
only the husband and not the wife can confer citizenship on
a foreign-born spouse. [13]
CONVENTION
ARTICLE 10
EDUCATION
Although schooling is mandatory until the
age of fourteen, the 1993-1994 public sector budgetary cuts
� spending on education decreased from 4.3 percent of GDP
in 92-93 to 1.9 percent of GDP in 96-97 � and currency devaluation,
made it impossible for many families to send their children
to school.� Discrimination against girls and women in education
occurs as a result of son preference:� it is still common
for families to send boys to school while girls stay at home.�
Aside from financial constraints, there is an expectation
that instead of going to school, girls should help in crop
farming, animal husbandry and household activities.� Evidence
of these expectations is reflected in the statistic that 68
percent of women over the age of 25 are illiterate compared
to 43 percent of men.� For women under the age of 25, the
illiteracy rate stands at 29 percent; for men it is 15 percent. [14]
Additionally, the number of girls enrolled
decreases with higher levels of education. Cameroonian activists
recommend that the government give scholarships to women to
stimulate their school enrollment rates, which would give
them the chance to break the cycle of poverty and dependence.
CONVENTION
ARTICLE 11
EMPLOYMENT
Women work predominantly as farmers, petty
traders, domestic workers and home makers. Despite women�s
considerable contribution to the national economy, they are
marginalized due to a perception that their status is inferior.
Choice
of Employment
The Civil Status Registration (Ordinance
No. 81-02 of 29 June 1998) Art. 74 (1) states that a married
woman �may exercise a trade different from her husband.��
Art. 74 (2), however, adds that �the husband may object to
the exercise of such a trade in the interest of the marriage
or their children.�� This provision gives the husband the
power to define what is appropriate, and it effectively denies
a woman the right to �freely choose� employment guaranteed
under this Covenant as it gives the husband the right to object
to her employment. [15]
Equal
Opportunities in Employment
The Cameroon government�s report to CESCR
AND CEDAW states that women are increasingly participating
in the labor� market and that they constitute more than 20
percent of the workers, but only 5.2 percent of women are
found in the skilled jobs.
[16] � Consequently, women
are found in low-level administrative positions, and are confined
to other social and family-related responsibilities.� The
report admits that business employers are reluctant to hire
women� because they do not have the desirable skills as a
result of their �limited access to training facilities.� [17]
The government does not explain whether
any efforts have been made to increase women�s access to training
programs to make their skills more marketable, and to create
an opportunity to change their social and economic marginalization
and dependence.��
Furthermore, training for women is unavailable
for certain occupations such as electrical work, plumbing,
carpentry, and other skilled crafts where better employment
opportunities exist. [18]
�According to information received from
a Cameroonian activist, limited occupational opportunities
force women to resort to employment in the informal sector,
including beer brewing (which is illegal), prostitution and
baby-sitting.� Prostitution obviously has hazardous implications
for women, such as exposure to sexually transmitted diseases,
including high risk of AIDS/HIV infection.� Baby-sitting relegates
women to low socio-economic status, rewarding hard work with
low pay. [19]
Protective
Provisions in the Labor Code
The
Labor Code contains some protective provisions which apply
only to women, which put them at a disadvantage regarding
promotions and salary level.� According to Equality Now and
several other women�s advocates, the protective measures should
be removed or be applied to both men and women.� For example,�
Section 82 (1) provides that the work time for women and children
shall not be less than twelve consecutive hours, and Section
82 (2) prohibits women and children from working between 10
p.m.-6 am.� Additionally, Section 83 of the Labor Code provides
that the Minister of Labor has the power to restrict tasks
that can be performed by women and pregnant women.
The Labor Code does not contain any protection
from sexual harassment.
CONVENTION
ARTICLE 12
HEALTH
CARE AND FAMILY PLANNING
Family
Planning
Cameroon has had a steady fertility rate
of 5.8 children per woman (1991; compared with other countries
in the area: Benin 6.3 (1996), Senegal� 6, Niger 6). [20] � According to Melissa Ndinge Nambangi,�
the sixteen years of family planning policy in Cameroon has
failed to reduce fertility rates and infant and maternal mortality. [21] �� There no evidence
that women�s health has improved and Cameroon continues to
have a very high maternal mortality rates;� Complications
from pregnancy and childbirth is one of the leading causes
of death for women of reproductive age. One in thirty-three
mothers die in childbirth. [22] �The average for developing
countries is one in twenty, and for industrialized countries
it is one in 10,000. [23]
According to Nambangi, despite discrepancies
between the fertility rate and the desired smaller number
of children, the cultural and societal ideal of high fertility
pose the main obstacle to change.�� She cites studies conducted
in other Sub-Saharan countries with similar cultural patterns
as in Cameroon.� It is revealing that while 98 percent of
men knew of at least one contraceptive method and� 84 percent
approved of family planning, they did not use them mainly
because of cultural beliefs and suspicions. [24] � According to Nambangi, in order to
change the underlying cultural patterns regarding family planning,�
more effective strategies targeting both women and men are
needed. Moreover, apart from evidence that factors such as
improved and accessible education and economic independence
have a positive effect on contraceptive use among women,�
Nambangi also recommends that the government make use of the
mass media, especially of television, to promote family planning.�
She demonstrates that this has been done successfully in other
countries in the region, such as Nigeria, where several studies
found that television played a significant role in increasing
the number of new patients at family planning clinics in three
Nigerian cities between 1985 and 1988. [25]
Abortion
Abortion is a prohibited under Section 337
of the Cameroonian Penal Code, with the exception of when
the pregnancy poses grave danger to mother�s health or if
the pregnancy has resulted from rape.� Women face one-year
imprisonment and a fine of 200,000 francs if they obtain the
abortion illegally. [26]
The high levels of maternal mortality (see
above) may be associated with the unavailability of safe and
legal abortion, and with a high fertility rate.
CONVENTION
ARTICLE 13
ECONOMIC
AND SOCIAL BENEFITS
The law does not provide adequate provisions
for child protection and child maintenance.� Consequently,
single mothers and victims of teenage pregnancy suffer hardships
while, as one Cameroonian activist put it, �men continue to
father children with impunity and abandon them to the girls.� [27]
CONVENTION
ARTICLE 15
EQUALITY
BEFORE LAW
Cameroon has a multiple legal system that
includes custom, and English and French law. Section 27 (1)
Southern Cameroon�s High Court Law (1955) states that: �The
High Court shall observe and enforce the observance of every
native law and custom which is not repugnant to natural justice,
equity and good conscience nor incompatible with any law for
the time being in force, and nothing in this law shall deprive
any person of the benefit of any such native law or custom.� [28]
Equality Now reports that the customary
laws � which are highly discriminatory against women � often
take precedence over legislative enactments.� A good example
is the customary inheritance law.
[29]
Rural
Women and Customary Inheritance Law
Traditionally and culturally women are seen
as responsible for providing for the family. [30]
Although 66 percent of rural workers are women,
they hold only about one percent of land.�� Despite the decision
of the Supreme Court recognizing women�s right to be granted
land and the existence of Cameroon�s Law of Succession, discriminatory
inheritance custom still dominates in Cameroon. Women do not
inherit property and estate letters of administration are
customarily issued to male relatives. [31]
The custom prohibits female children from
inheriting real estate from parents.� Since, upon marriage,
the female children leave the clan to join their husband�s
clan, customarily the land remains in the hands of the male
children.
Limits on women�s land ownership also lead
to their economic and social marginalization as, for instance,
they make it very difficult for women to obtain loans for
which banks typically require collateral. [32]
Typically, rural women are completely unaware
that the law guarantees equal access to land � a result of
high illiteracy levels and a lack of access to relevant information.�
Across of all age groups, only about 50 percent of women in
Cameroon are able to read and write compared to� 75 percent
of men, and levels of literacy in rural areas are even lower. [33]
Women�s activists in Cameroon have appealed
for greater attention and the formation of programs aimed
at increasing literacy among women and a better application
of the laws granting women the right to inherit land, but
the government has not done enough to start changing the de
facto inequality and economic marginalization of women.�
Particularly, it has not distributed widely enough information
on the rights of women.�� Many activists see this as the main
obstacle to change.
CONVENTION
ARTICLE 16
MARRIAGE
AND FAMILY LAW
Age
of Marriage
The statutory minimum age of consent to
marriage for girls is lower than for boys, 16 compared to
19 years. [34] � Moreover, under predominant customary
practices, girls are� deprived of the right to continue their
schooling after marriage [35]
� and forced into marriage at an even earlier age,
especially in the northern part of Cameroon.�� Adolescent
pregnancy remains at high levels � 11 percent of all babies
are born to adolescent mothers. [36]
Polygamy/
Discrimination in Marriage and Divorce
Despite constitutional guarantees recognizing
women�s rights, women and men do not enjoy equality in marriage.�
By custom and law, polygamy� is the rule.� Spousal abuse does
not constitute grounds for divorce under custom.� In some
Northern provinces, some Lamibe men allegedly prohibit their
wives and concubines from leaving their places of residence. [37]
In the event of divorce, particularly in
the prevalent traditional customary courts, custody of children
over six years of age is determined based on the husband�s
wishes, since children and wife belong to the husband.
Women do not inherit property from a deceased
husband.� In such cases, the property may be taken by the
husband�s family and she may be compelled to continue� conjugal
relations with the husband�s male kin. [38]
Adultery
Section 361 of the Penal Code criminalizes
adultery, but the provisions differ depending upon whether
the adulterer is the wife or the husband.� The law provides
that �(1) any married woman having sexual intercourse with
a man other than her husband shall be punished,� while �(2)
any married man having sexual intercourse in the matrimonial
home, or habitually having sexual intercourse elsewhere, with
a woman other than his wife or wives, shall be punished.� [39]
While in the case of women all adultery
is a criminal offense, for men it is a crime depending on
the venue or if it is habitual.
GENERAL RECOMMENDATION #19
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
Domestic
Violence
Although there are no reliable data on the
extent of this problem, the inferior societal status of women,
and the considerable number of newspaper reports (which is
considered to record only a small fraction of incidents),
suggest that violence against women is widespread in Cameroon.�
Wife beating, for instance, is justified under custom.� The
husband has the right to chastise his wife (degree unspecified)
and the wife cannot complain because �she deserves the punishment.� [40]
Although general legal provisions cover
rape, indecency to a minor and assault, there is no domestic
abuse law in Cameroon.� The existing laws do not impose effective
punishment against individuals who commit acts of violence
against women and girls.�
Additionally, cultural attitudes often prevent
women and girls from filing complaints against their partners.
Marital rape is recognized as an offense under statutory law,
but it is culturally accepted that consent to marriage constitutes
unlimited consent to sexual intercourse.� According to women�s
human rights activists, the Cameroon government is complacent
about the situation and has failed to take decisive action
to combat the problem, such as passing rigid legislation specifically
prohibiting spousal abuse.� The government has made no efforts
to ensure that law enforcement officials and public officers
responsible for investigating violence against women receive
training to understand the complexities of issues surrounding
domestic assault.�
Even in cases where legal redress is available,
reports are rarely made to the police.� An arrest and eventual
prosecution is unlikely because the police usually encourage
the woman or girl to reconcile with her partner.� No domestic
abuse advocacy programs, either government sponsored or private,
are in place.� There are no crisis centers or other facilities
and services to help women deal with the situations and lead
them through the legal process. [41]
Female
Genital Mutilation (FGM)
Although not widely practiced in Cameroon,�
FGM is found in some parts of the country, especially the
far North and Southwest provinces.�� It involves the most
severe form,� infibulation, which is usually performed on
preadolescent girls.� Although the government has acknowledged
the harmfulness of the practice and condemned it � including
the adoption of the National Action Plan against FGM� in 1999
� it has not taken steps to outlaw it. [42] � It is unknown if any educational
programs, especially in the areas of the country where the
practice is known to occur, have been developed or planned
to help eradicate it.
ACTIONS
TAKEN BY OTHER UN HUMAN RIGHTS MECHANISMS PERTAINING TO WOMEN�S
HUMAN RIGHTS IN CAMEROON:
Concluding
Observations of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights: Cameroon, 8 December 1999 (E/C.12/1/Add.40).
Suggestions
and recommendations:
�
Take
appropriate measures, including the enactment of legislation,
to ensure that all the people of Cameroon enjoy the economic,
social and cultural rights set forth in the Covenant.
�
Take
more active and positive steps to address the inequality of
and discriminations against women in Cameroon, in law and
fact;� repeal all provisions of the Civil and Commercial Codes
which discriminate against women.
�
Prohibit
customary practices which violate the rights of women and
to take active measures to combat such practices and beliefs
by all means, including educational programs. Focus, in particular,
on the elimination of the practices of polygamy, forced marriages
and female genital mutilation, and the bias in favor of the
education of boys.
�
Introduce
specific legislation and policies to prohibit domestic violence
and sexual harassment in the workplace, with a view to strengthening
the protection of women.
�
Review
its legislation and policy regarding child maintenance, with
a view to ensuring the provision of adequate social security
for single parents and low-income families.
�
Review
its policies on health in order to address, in particular,
maternal mortality, adolescent pregnancies and the HIV/AIDS
epidemic; review family planning policies with a view to increasing
access to information concerning contraceptives through educational
programs.
Concluding
Observations of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination: Cameroon, 31 March 1998 (CERD/C/304/Add.53).
No
recommendations concerning women were issued by this Committee.
Concluding
Observations of the Human Rights Committee: Cameroon, 18 April
1994 (CCPR/C/79/Add.33).
Suggestions
and recommendations:
�
Improve
the situation of women, in particular by adopting the necessary
educational and other measures to overcome the weight of customs
and traditions and by proceeding as soon as possible with
its plan to amend the Family Code.