When Evernice Munando founded the Female Students Network Trust (FSNT) in 2005, it was almost unheard of for young women to be elected to Zimbabwe’s influential Student Unions, considered to be the training ground for the country’s future political leaders.
Evernice explains that sexual harassment and discrimination are the greatest challenges facing young women at universities in Zimbabwe.
Traditional gender norms and gender-based discrimination are still pervasive, especially in rural areas according to recent research carried out by FSNT and the Zimbabwe National Commission to UNESCO. Progressively though, there are signs that patriarchal attitudes and stereotypes keeping girls and women behind are beginning to shift in urban centers.
In 2019 FSNT, laureate of the UNESCO Prize for Girls’ and Women’s Education, celebrated the election of three women as Student Union Presidents, and the election of many more to various leadership positions in student-led organizations.
Meet Abiona, a young leader
Abiona Mataranyika, a 22-year-old student, made history when she was elected as the first woman President of the Student Representative Council at the University of Zimbabwe, the country’s oldest and most prestigious institution.