African Union
African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights
Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa
- Published
- Commenced on 25 November 2005
- [This is the version of this document at 11 July 2003 and includes any amendments published up to 23 June 2022.]
Article 1 – Definitions
For the purpose of the present Protocol:Article 2 – Elimination of discrimination against women
Article 3 – Right to dignity
Article 4 – The rights to life, integrity and security of the person
Article 5 – Elimination of harmful practices
States Parties shall prohibit and condemn all forms of harmful practices which negatively affect the human rights of women and which are contrary to recognised international standards. States Parties shall take all necessary legislative and other measures to eliminate such practices, including:Article 6 – Marriage
States Parties shall ensure that women and men enjoy equal rights and are regarded as equal partners in marriage. They shall enact appropriate national legislative measures to guarantee that:Article 7 – Separation, divorce and annulment of marriage
States Parties shall enact appropriate legislation to ensure that women and men enjoy the same rights in case of separation, divorce or annulment of marriage. In this regard, they shall ensure that:Article 8 – Access to justice and equal protection before the law
Women and men are equal before the law and shall have the right to equal protection and benefit of the law. States Parties shall take all appropriate measures to ensure:Article 9 – Right to participation in the political and decision-making process
Article 10 – Right to peace
Article 11 – Protection of women in armed conflicts
Article 12 – Right to education and training
Article 13 – Economic and social welfare rights
States Parties shall adopt and enforce legislative and other measures to guarantee women equal opportunities in work and career advancement and other economic opportunities. In this respect, they shall:Article 14 – Health and reproductive rights
Article 15 – Right to food security
States Parties shall ensure that women have the right to nutritious and adequate food. In this regard, they shall take appropriate measures to:Article 16 – Right to adequate housing
Women shall have the right to equal access to housing and to acceptable living conditions in a healthy environment. To ensure this right, States Parties shall grant to women, whatever their marital status, access to adequate housing.Article 17 – Right to positive cultural context
Article 18 – Right to a healthy and sustainable environment
Article 19 – Right to sustainable development
Women shall have the right to fully enjoy their right to sustainable development. In this connection, the States Parties shall take all appropriate measures to:Article 20 – Widows' rights
States Parties shall take appropriate legal measures to ensure that widows enjoy all human rights through the implementation of the following provisions:Article 21 – Right to inheritance
Article 22 – Special protection of elderly women
The States Parties undertake to:Article 23 – Special protection of women with disabilities
The States Parties undertake to:Article 24 – Special protection of women in distress
The States Parties undertake to:Article 25 – Remedies
States Parties shall undertake to:Article 26 – Implementation and monitoring
Article 27 – Interpretation
The African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights shall be seized with matters of interpretation arising from the application or implementation of this Protocol.Article 28 – Signature, ratification and accession
Article 29 – Entry into force
Article 30 – Amendment and revision
Article 31 – Status of the present Protocol
None of the provisions of the present Protocol shall affect more favourable provisions for the realisation of the rights of women contained in the national legislation of States Parties or in any other regional, continental or international conventions, treaties or agreements applicable in these States Parties.Article 32 – Transitional provisions
Pending the establishment of the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights, the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights shall be the seized with matters of interpretation arising from the application and implementation of this Protocol.History of this document
25 November 2005
Commenced
11 July 2003 this version
Consolidation
Cited documents 0
Documents citing this one 10
Judgment
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Mali's Family Code violates regional and international law by enabling child marriage, forced marriage, and discrimination in inheritance.
Human rights – Discrimination against women and children – Minimum age of marriage – Consent to marriage – Inheritance rights – Customary and religious law – Harmonisation of domestic law with regional and international obligations – African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child – Maputo Protocol – CEDAW – Harmful traditional practices.
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Court affirms jurisdiction and admissibility, including extraterritorial jurisdiction, over interstate human-rights claims arising from armed conflict.
Inter-state proceedings; jurisdiction under Article 3(1) Protocol – no ICJ-style prior dispute required; material jurisdiction if alleged rights protected by Charter or ratified instruments; extraterritorial jurisdiction where State involvement in armed conflict affects hostilities; admissibility – regional/AU preliminary political procedures do not bar Court proceedings; abuse of process requires manifest bad faith; mass-media evidence permissible if not exclusive; exhaustion of local remedies waivable for systemic/large-scale violations; lis pendens/res judicata require identical parties, subject-matter and prior decision.
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The court ordered the deceased applicant's name struck out and amended the application title without affecting the proceedings.
Procedure — Striking out deceased applicant from list of applicants — Power of the Court under Rule 90 — Change of title of application — Effect on pending matters — Administration of justice.
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State breached due-diligence obligations by failing to prevent, investigate and prosecute trafficking and discriminating against the victim.
Admissibility — exhaustion exception where domestic remedies ineffective; Trafficking & sexual exploitation — State due-diligence to prevent, investigate and prosecute; Article 5 African Charter — cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment and trafficking; Articles 2 and 18(3) — substantive equality and multiple discrimination of women; Remedies — investigations, prosecutions, legislative reform, compensation determination by domestic courts, reporting requirement.
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Failure to exhaust local remedies renders an application inadmissible before the African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights.
International human rights law – exhaustion of local remedies – inadmissibility of application – reasonable duration of domestic proceedings – effectiveness of domestic remedies – jurisdiction of the African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights.
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Blanket exclusion of first‑born daughters from chieftainship is unlawful sex discrimination; State must reform law and customary practice.
Human rights — Gender discrimination — Customary succession — African Charter and Maputo Protocol — Commission’s contentious jurisdiction over Protocol — Obligation to eliminate discrimination in law and custom — Recommendation to amend Chieftainship Act to permit first‑born daughters’ succession.
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Application challenging exclusion of pregnant schoolgirls dismissed as settled by prior ACERWC decision; Court had jurisdiction.
* Human rights — Education and non‑discrimination — Challenge to exclusion/expulsion of pregnant and parenting girls from public schools — Interaction between regional mechanisms — Admissibility under Article 56(7) of the African Charter — Criteria for 'settled' matters (identity of parties, identity of subject‑matter, prior decision on merits).
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Respondent failed to prevent, investigate and remedy torture, rape, arbitrary detention and related Charter violations.
African Commission — Admissibility: constructive exhaustion where threats and intimidation render domestic remedies ineffective; Sexual violence in custody — rape and gang‑rape can amount to torture; State duty of due diligence — obligation to conduct prompt, impartial and effective investigations and to provide reparation; Violations found: Articles 1,2,3,5,6,7(1)(a),9(2),10(1),11,12(1)–(2) of the African Charter; Remedies: compensation, prosecution, institutional reform, safeguards and training.
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Residency-based restrictions on diaspora voting by Zimbabwean citizens held lawful, non-discriminatory and proportionate under the African Charter.
Human rights – right to participate in government – restrictions on diaspora voting – residency requirements – discrimination – equal protection of the law – proportionality and necessity of restrictions on external voting – freedom of expression – interpretation of African Charter.
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Publication request on presidential candidacy was moot; other election-related provisional measures dismissed as merits issues.
Electoral law – provisional measures – mootness of publication request – requirements for provisional measures: extreme gravity, urgency and irreparable harm – merits-related electoral challenges (sponsorship requirement, Bulletin No. 3, validation of rejected candidacies, composition of electoral management body) not suitable for provisional relief.
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