NGOCC Raises Concerns Over Violence, Detentions During Nominations
The women’s advocacy council says its team members were detained by police while supporting a female aspirant — and warns political violence remains a key barrier to women’s leadership.
In a national update issued by NGOCC board chairperson Beauty Katebe, the organisation said Zambia continues to face low levels of female representation in political leadership despite years of advocacy around gender equality and inclusive governance.
Katebe said NGOCC entered the 2026 election process with a strong focus on increasing the number of women appearing on the ballot, arguing that voters cannot elect women into leadership if political parties fail to adopt female candidates in the first place.
We are further concerned that while supporting one female aspirant, members of the NGOCC team were detained by police under circumstances that fall short of the democratic values and freedoms Zambia upholds.
— Beauty Katebe, NGOCC Board Chairperson
The organisation said it held extensive engagement meetings with political parties before nominations opened, pushing for deliberate adoption of more women candidates across various elective positions. Lists of qualified women were submitted to political parties for consideration, and the council said it was encouraged by the number of women who successfully filed nominations.
NGOCC also disclosed that it engaged aspiring independent female candidates and provided mentorship and guidance to women navigating what it described as a highly competitive and demanding process.
At the same time, the organisation raised concern over incidents recorded during the filing process, including violence, alleged corruption, confusion and reports involving duplicated or disputed adoption certificates. It noted that political violence remains one of the major barriers preventing women from fully participating in politics, creating fear, intimidation and unsafe conditions for aspiring female leaders.
NGOCC has since appealed to political parties, law enforcement agencies and electoral stakeholders to uphold peace, transparency, fairness and inclusivity throughout the election period, and called for peaceful, issue-based campaigns as the country transitions into the official campaign season ahead of the August polls.
The council said it now intends to wait for the Electoral Commission of Zambia’s official list of validly nominated candidates in order to assess the extent to which female representation was reflected in the final adoption outcomes.


