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Child
abused every hour, new data reveals
IRIN News
November 20, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56443
HARARE - A child is abused every hour
in Zimbabwe, according to new data released by a group of nongovernmental
organisations (NGOs) working to stop the suffering.
"More than 8,600 cases of child abuse
were reported in Zimbabwe in 2005 - that is 24 every day ... More
than half of all cases reported involve sexual abuse of children,"
said James Elder, the United Nations' Children's Fund (Unicef) spokesman
in Zimbabwe.
The data was compiled by the Child
Protection Working Group (CPWG), a network of NGOs, churches, community
groups, UN agencies and the government, formed in 2002 to respond
to the humanitarian needs of children.
"Cases of abuse against Zimbabwean
children appear to be spiralling out of control," Elder said.
In the first nine months of this year,
Childline, a phone-in service for children in distress or adults
wishing to report cases of abuse, reported more than 34,000 calls,
or more than five every hour. The NGO said 70 percent of calls received
were related to sexual abuse of children.
"Children who are sexually abused are
also the most vulnerable to contracting HIV/AIDS. The impact can
therefore, quite literally, last a lifetime and be fatal," said
Elder. He added Zimbabwe has one of the largest populations of orphans
and vulnerable children - about two million - exposing more of them
to abuse.
Child abuse can sometimes cripple families
psychologically and financially. Stella Marongwe, 34, a Zimbabwean
cross-border informal trader who sells cigarettes in Zambia, almost
committed suicide when she learnt that her husband had been raping
their 10-year-old daughter in her absence.
"It devastated me so much when I discovered
that the very father of my daughter was sexually abusing her. I
completely trusted him and was shocked one day when I examined the
child and noticed that her private parts were damaged," Marongwe
told IRIN. The husband is now serving a 25-year jail term after
being convicted for raping the girl on ten occasions while Marongwe
was away.
The child contracted a sexually transmitted
disease but, fortunately, two tests showed she was HIV-negative.
She is, however, shunned by her schoolmates. "She thinks all men
are devils and has vowed to take revenge when she grows up; she
is very bitter," said Marongwe.
The abuse has affected the family financially
as well. Marongwe has cut down on her trips to Zambia because she
is afraid her only other child, a daughter aged 14, might meet the
same fate. She has also had to seek legal protection to prevent
her husband's relatives from taking her daughters on the grounds
that she was neglecting them.
CPWG has called for nationwide prevention
programmes to be dramatically stepped up, and has stressed the need
for parents, guardians and teachers to ensure a protective environment
for children, and be vigilant in detecting and preventing all forms
of child abuse. It has also called for the development of life-skills
programmes to empower children, and the need for traditional and
religious leaders to be unequivocal in their condemnation of child
abuse.
The group said the myth held by some
men that having sex with virgins could cure sexually transmitted
diseases had added to the problem of child abuse.
HIV-related illnesses kill 3,000 Zimbabweans
every week and 72 babies become HIV-positive every day as a result
of a lack of programmes to prevent mother-to-child transmission
of the virus.
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