August is women�s month!

On 9 August 1956, 20 000 South African women of all colours, black, brown, pink and white travelling by all modes of transport , kombi, private car, bus, train, converged in Pretoria to hand a petition against passes for black women to JG Strydom the Premier of Apartheid SA.

Hitherto the hated pass document known as dompass or badge of slavery, in the black ghettoes was carried by male Africans only . An attempt had been made decades previously, and meeting a militant resistance from the women organizations, was shelved until the early 1950s. Women had started with provincial protests, and it was time to mobilize the whole country to descend on the capital, Pretoria, to scare the wits out of Strydom, singing, “wee Strydom, wa thinth’abafazi , wa thinth’imbokotho uza kufa …!’ (Hey Strydom, you have struck a rock you’ll die!}  Not long thereafter Strydom was  no more!

Women the world over have been enslaved, subjugated, discriminated against , genitally mutilated and abused without let and hindrance. When the democratic system of government was conceived women were not supposed to be part of it by design; they were denied the vote even in those countries that pioneered the democratic system. Women had to fight with all their might to be recognised .

Editor's Comment
Inspect the voters' roll!

The recent disclosure by the IEC that 2,513 registrations have been turned down due to various irregularities should prompt all Batswana to meticulously review the voters' rolls and address concerns about rejected registrations.The disparities flagged by the IEC are troubling and emphasise the significance of rigorous voter registration processes.Out of the rejected registrations, 29 individuals were disqualified due to non-existent Omang...

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