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INHERITANCE OF LAND AND PROPERTY BY WOMEN:
In almost every society, rules have been designed to determine
who will take over the property and responsibilities after a
death in the family. But housing and land are still regarded as
under the control of men. Even formal laws sometimes perpetuate
this, and prevent women from inheriting. Even if laws are equal,
custom and tradition dominate and prevent women and girls from
inheriting. The result is that women and girls, after the death
of a father or husband, are often robbed of the housing and land
they live in and left homeless and destitute.
While this discrimination stems from customs that favor men for
inheritance and property ownership, it is also enabled by
government policies and laws that discriminate in inheritance
and divorce matters.
Many widows are barred by law and custom from inheriting
property, evicted from their lands and homes by in-laws, and
stripped of their possessions. Religious laws prevent women
from inheriting their equal share. Some women who are widowed
are coerced or see no other option but to give their share of
family land to their brothers in exchange for economic support.
In Africa, inheritance is a daily issue. With the tragedies of
armed conflict, HIV/AIDS, and poverty, widowhood is a reality
for a full 25% of all African women. In some countries, for
example Rwanda, 50% of women are widows. The plight of women
demands that States deal aggressively with inheritance, and that
this no longer be considered a private matter. It is a question
of rights, and it is ultimately the responsibility of the State
to ensure that these are fulfilled. But too often, inheritance
is viewed as a private matter, causing governments to be
reluctant to interfere.
Even where women have legal rights to own and inherit houses,
land or other property, they are ignorant of that right. Many
women do not know that legal means exist through which they can
claim these rights. A few women who are aware of this have
access to legal advice. Even if they have access to legal
advice, some do not have money to obtain this advice.
A woman’s access to property usually hinges on her relationship
to a man usually father, brother, husband. When the relationship
ends, the woman may lose not only her home and land, but
livestock, household goods, and other property.
In some communities in Africa, a widow will inherit land in
trust for her male children provided they are minors. In some
parts, a widow will be given a life interest in the land. If she
remarries however, she risks forfeiting all claims to this land.
However, such arrangement only grant women access to land and
property and not ownership so they have no right to engage in
any transaction related to the land.
In order to inherit, sometime widows are forced to undergo
cleansing or other rituals. These often involve coerced sex with
an in law relative or even a stranger. Such practices must end.
Other
Cross-cutting Links:
Discrimination |
Poverty
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Housing
Rights |
HIV/AIDS
|
Domestic
Violence |