- Bience P. Gawanas
Bience Philomina Gawanas (Born 1956 in
Namibia ) is Commissioner ofSocial Affairs on theAfrican Commission . She was a Commissioner on the Public Service Commission in Namibia from 1991 to 1996, and an Ombudswoman in the Namibian Government from 1996 to 2003. She has also been a Lecturer in Gender Law at theUniversity of Namibia , Director of the Board of theCentral Bank of Namibia , and involved in many non-governmental organizations including Secretary-General of the Namibian National Women's Organization and patron of Namibian Federation of Persons with Disabilities. As Chairperson of the Law Reform Commission she oversaw the passage of the Married Persons' Equality Act. The commission also did extensive work on Rape Acts and other important laws that were eventually passed after her time.She attended secondary school at St Theresa Catholic school in
Tses ,Karas Region , southern Namibia. From Tses she went toUniversity of the Western Cape (UWC) inCape Town ,South Africa , to study law; Catholic sponsors helped her resist the pressure ofapartheid officials to switch careers from law to nursing. Namibia was occupied illegally bySouth Africa until 1990. "When I decided to study law, a white schools inspector told me that as a black child my intelligence was lower than that of a white child and that maybe law was not meant for me," she said to one interviewer. "Today I am a lawyer and I have proved that intelligence has got nothing to do with a person's colour."Gawanas's interest in law was sparked after her beloved elder brother Jeka was picked up by whites and beaten to death while hitch-hiking, and police decided it was a "road accident".
Bience was sent home from UWC during demonstrations in 1976 and became an active member of SWAPO Youth League in Namibia and a teacher. She went into exile and lived in
Zambia ,Angola andCuba . In 1981 theInternational Labour Organization sponsored her as an intern at their headquarters and subsequently on alabour law study. After this Africa Educational Trust sponsored her through a law degree atUniversity of Warwick , UK and then qualified as abarrister atLincoln's Inn ,London . Her practical training included work with Lord Tony Gifford on human rights cases such as the "Birmingham Six " appeal of alleged bombers who were later exonerated. Throughout her exile, Bience continued to campaign for Namibia's freedom from South African rule.In 1988 she travelled to Zambia to visit her daughter and was detained by
SWAPO . Over an extended period the movement detained many thousands of Namibians as part of a "spy scare". These allegations were never proved despite months of solitary confinement and torture. Gawanas later became one of the first Namibians to return alive from the "dungeons" inLubango , Southern Angola, in 1989, some months before many other surviving detainees were released. By July 1989, she and her daughter were repatriated by theUnited Nations and were back on Namibian soil.Her first job back in Namibia from exile was with Advocate
Anton Lubowski , which ended when apartheid agents murdered Anton on his front doorstep in an unsuccessful attempt to destabilize the 1989 UN-supervised elections. She then worked as with the public-interest Legal Assistance Centre until 1991 when she was appointed by Parliament to the Public Service Commission of Namibia. Her work there included extensive rebalancing of the Namibian civil service.Former PresidentSam Nujoma appointed her Ombudsman, on recommendation of the Judicial Services Commission, in 1996 and she served here, investigating and resolving complaints of maladministration at all levels until 2003. She also served as Executive Secretary of the African Ombudsman Association.In July 2003 Bience was elected by the African Heads of State as Commissioner of Social Affairs for the African Union, based in
Addis Ababa ,Ethiopia . She has been seeking to increase the profile ofsocial development issues on the continental agenda.External links
* [http://allafrica.com/stories/200407130017.html Gawanas article at AllAfrica.com]
* [http://www.africa-union.org/root/au/AUC/AUCleaders/sa.doc Gawanas, Bience P. Gawanas bio]
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