President Museveni of
Uganda came under fire, on Monday, for saying he had not stepped into the
kitchen since he got married, and that it was not a man’s role to cook.
“The head of the home never
goes into the kitchen. It is now 45 years with Mama Janet, I have never stepped
into the kitchen.
That is how it should be,”
he said on Sunday in a statement, as an example of how politicians and civil
servants should stick to proscribed roles.
Oxfam’s International
Executive Director, Winnie Byanyima, hit back at the 74-year-old president on
Twitter, saying she was “disappointed”.
“Cooking isn’t a woman’s
job. It’s a life skill. All people – men and women should cook,” she wrote.
“When cooking, cleaning and
doing other domestic chores are left to women, they are denied an equal chance
to raise incomes or to be politically active.”
Ms Alice Alaso, a top
mobiliser for The New Formation political pressure group said: “Museveni has
revealed to the world what he has always believed in: that women can never be
the same as their male counterparts.”
A section of online
publications however, defended Mr Museveni’s comments as consistent with the
country’s culture which sees men cooking as “taboo”, saying some ethnic groups
in the country have a word referring to men who cook as a “transvestite or a
man dressing and behaving like a woman.”
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