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ZIMBABWE:
More children abused as situation worsens
IRIN
News
January 23, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=51281
JOHANNESBURG
- The worsening humanitarian situation in Zimbabwe is making children
more vulnerable to abuse, according to child rights NGOs.
"For instance,
because of the hike in schools fees many children are visiting schools
[trying to negotiate payment] - it makes them more vulnerable at
the hands of teachers who exploit them," said Witness Chikoko, acting
director of the African
Network for the Prevention and Protection Against Child Abuse and
Neglect.
Staff at a boarding
primary school near Marondera outside the capital, Harare, were
recently charged with abusing 52 girls, while 14 primary school
girls were also allegedly abused by staff members at a school in
the capital.
The Girl
Child Network (GCN), an NGO working in 32 of Zimbabwe's 58 districts,
said it had recorded an average of 700 rape cases of girls aged
up to 16 every month in 2005 - more than 8,000 cases. According
to GCN about 93 percent of the children raped in Zimbabwe are girls
and seven percent boys.
"The numbers
are high because more girls are reporting rape cases," said Betty
Makoni, GCN's founder and director, but admitted that the country
has a high incidence of sexual abuse.
"It is a combination
of factors: the large number of AIDS orphans; increasing poverty,
which has forced girls to take up risky professions such as sex
work and forced marriages."
About half the
girls raped were from child-headed households, she added. Zimbabwe
has one of the highest levels of HIV/AIDS in southern Africa, which
has left one in five children orphaned.
UN Children's
Fund (UNICEF) spokesman James Elder said the organisation was "horrified"
at the high incidence of sexual abuse among children, but noted
that the country had more than a million orphaned children, which
made a large vulnerable population.
UNICEF was currently
stepping up its work with communities, educating them to spot the
signs of child abuse and encouraging them to "tenaciously protect
their children by establishing and supporting functional child protection
committees, where children themselves are represented," said Elder.
"Community leaders,
teachers, mums and dads - these people are the front line in the
fight against child abuse," said UNICEF's head of child protection
in Zimbabwe, Jose Bergua. "If perpetrators are going to be stopped,
if children are going to have the confidence to speak out against
these evils, then authority figures need to make it patently clear
that child abuse in their communities will not be stomached - silence
on this issue shelters the perpetrators and is a crime against children."
Zimbabwe is
going through a severe economic crisis and facing serious food shortages
as a result of recurring poor harvests and the government's fast-track
land redistribution programme, which began in 2000 and has disrupted
agricultural production and slashed export earnings.
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