Do Sex Strikes Work? – A Special Report

This is the VOA Special English Health Report , from http://voaspecialenglish.com

Women in a civil rights group in Togo called a weeklong sex strike in August to try to force the president of the West African nation to resign. Members of “Let’s Save Togo” planned to withhold sex from their husbands to pressure the men to take action against President Faure Gnassingbe. The opposition says his family has ruled Togo for too long. He became president in 2005, shortly after the death of his father — who had held power for 38 years. Withholding sex for political goals has a long history. The idea appears in the theater of ancient Greece. In the play “Lysistrata,” the women of Athens decide to deny their husbands sex until the men end the Peloponnesian War. But do sex strikes work? Pepper Schwartz is a sociology professor at the University of Washington in Seattle. She says the idea is good for making news headlines, but it takes a lot of work. She says the sex strike is a good way to make a point for a few days. But she says that it probably will not work over a long period of time. She also notes that: “if you do stick to it too long, you might lose that other person’s willingness to support your issue.”But pro-democracy activists in Togo say a sex strike during the civil war in Liberia gave them cause for hope. In 2003, Liberia had been through 14 years of war. Leaders of the group Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace organized a series of nonviolent actions. They included a sex strike. The actions earned the group’s leader a share of the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize. Leymah Gbowee shared the prize with two other women, including Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf. She became Africa’s first democratically-elected female president in 2006. The third winner was Tawakkul Karman, a women’s rights activist in Yemen. Yaliwe Clarke teaches gender studies at the University of Cape Town in South Africa. She says that the women in Togo can inspire other women in Africa just like the Mass Action for Peace in Liberia did. But sociology professor Pepper Schwartz says women need to hold real power in order for something like a sex strike to work. “They only work in proportion to the amount of power women have in a society,” she says. “In other words, you have to have a certain amount of power already to tell your husband no.” She says this depends on having a society where men respect the opinions and wishes of women. For VOA Learning English, I’m Laurel Bowman. (Adapted from a radio program broadcast 05Sep2012)

Zimbabwe’s MDC leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, says he will not accept another stolen election

HARARE (VOA) — Zimbabwean Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai Saturday said his party will not allow President Robert Mugabe to rig another election. The Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party leader made the comment a few days after President Mugabe announced that Zimbabwe would hold elections to end the country’s coalition government next March. made his remarks as recent surveys show his party losing ground.

Addressing members of his MDC party supporters in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second-largest city, Prime Minister Tsvangirai said he would win next year’s elections set for March. He dismissed recent surveys suggesting that support for his party is waning. “The MDC has never lost support. We must be strategic. ZANU-PF cannot steal another election and get away with it,” he said.

ZANU-PF is the party of President Robert Mugabe, with whom Tsvangirai formed a coalition government in 2009 after the disputed 2008 election.

The unity government has stabilized Zimbabwe’s economy but both men have disagreed on a number of issues. Last week, the justice minister said a general election would be held next year. Tsvangirai says he will help move the economy forward.

“If you vote for us, our vision is to create a Zimbabwe that is able to respect people of Zimbabwe and make them prosperous. No longer are we going to have a culture of one-man rule who happens to be Robert Mugabe. We do not want to replace ZANU-PF with Tsvangirai. We want to replace Mugabe with a democratic MDC. Another pillar (if MDC wins election) is: we cannot talk of an economy which does not create jobs. Our economy must be once again a vibrant economy,” he said.

MDC party spokesman Douglas Mwonzora said the election dates proposed by President Mugabe are not feasible. He also said his party would prove wrong surveys predicting that the MDC will lose. “Regarding surveys, yes, we take note of some of the things that were said in the survey. But what we know is that the people of Zimbabwe support the MDC. Today we have seen thousands and thousands of people that have come to White City Stadium… to listen to President Tsvangirai,” he said.

Tsvangirai addressed his supporters for close to an hour in Bulawayo.