Women in Zimbabwe's Parliament Will Change Widow's Lives
Michelle Chifamba writes through Inter Press Service:
[...]
The Zimbabwe Administration of Estates Act No. 6 of 1997 stipulates that
if a spouse dies without a will, the surviving partner inherits their
immovable property. Prior to this act, a husband's estate was dissolved
if he died intestate.
However, Zimbabwe Women Lawyers Association director Emilia Muchawa
told IPS that although 86 percent of the country's women earn a living
farming communal land allocated to their husbands by traditional chiefs,
legislation is silent on the issue of women's rights to inherit this land.
"Customarily chiefs allocate land to male heads of households, but women
do not automatically inherit this upon their husband's death.
"They may be evicted from the land when widowed, regardless of the years
they spent married. Many who remain on the land do so at the goodwill
of their in-laws or traditional leaders. Childless widows are often
evicted, as are young widows who refuse to be physically `inherited'
by a male relative of their late husband," she told IPS.
[...]
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Letzte Änderung: Thursday, 27-Jun-2013 10:06:43 CEST
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