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Putting
it right: Addressing human rights violations against Zimbabwean
women
Research
and Advocacy Unit
March
19, 2009
http://hub.witness.org/en/ReportVAWZimbabwe
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Introduction
The political
parties in Zimbabwe signed a historic
deal on the 15th September 2008 to put an end to the political
and economic crisis that has been ongoing since 2000. In this deal,
the parties agreed to put an end to politically motivated violence
and bring all perpetrators to book, if only for the violence that
took place between March and June 2008, and this implies that victims
will have a right to a remedy that usually comprises three aspects;
truth, justice, and reparations. The new government will have to
determine the truth about the abuses, bring the perpetrators to
justice, and award the victims reparations, be it in the form of
compensation, rehabilitation, restitution, or all three. The Global
Political Agreement [GPA] does not, however, have any provisions
for a transitional justice process or any compensatory or reparative
process for the victims of the violence. To be credible, any effective
deal should not only end ongoing violations and hold to account
those responsible for past abuses, but should also attempt to return
the victims to the position they were in before the abuses.
The GPA was welcomed
by women as it acknowledges the equality between men and women and
recognizes women's role in nation building and the abuses
they suffered in the process, and continue to suffer, but it must
be noted that women's representation at the negotiations was
minimal and the issues affecting women were primarily decided by
men. What remains to be seen is how the clauses in the GPA will
be implemented and what real impact it will have on women's
lives. The GPA does not look at women as a specific group, but,
under Articles 7(a) and
(d), combines them with the other generic groupings; race, age,
gender and political affiliation. This suggests that the parties
have not regarded women as a particularly vulnerable group in a
time of crisis, which they obviously are; this has to be acknowledged
in the implementation of the clauses in the GPA that relate to the
position of women.
In all situations of
conflict, merely by virtue of their gender identity, women are both
primary and secondary victims; they suffer when they are themselves
violated, and they also suffer when their family members are violated
in that they have the responsibility of looking after the injured
person or persons. This has not been any different in Zimbabwe.
There is considerable anecdotal evidence of politically motivated
violence against women, and organizations have been documenting
the violence to support the anecdotal evidence.
In general, warring parties
frequently target civilians and women are always primary amongst
civilians in facing the consequences of the conflict. Women suffer
as primary victims when sexual abuse is used as a weapon of war;
they can be taken as sexual slaves to service the troops, as was
seen during the liberation war in Zimbabwe where women cooked and
provided sexual services to the guerilla army at their bases, and,
in recent times, the militia camps to which women and young girls
were abducted and abused. They are raped to dehumanize them and
as a form of punishment for their male family members, as rape not
only humiliates the person raped but also the whole family and their
community. The specific sexual violence against women is in addition
to other forms of violence that men suffer as well; torture, electric
shocks and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment.
Women also
suffer as secondary victims because of their reproductive roles.
Many women are frequently not economically independent; neither
do they usually own resources such as land for sustaining their
livelihoods. Therefore, when their male family members are injured
or killed as a result of the conflict, they lose breadwinners, suffer
the consequences of being displaced from their land, and they lose
their status in the community. It is well documented that women
suffer anxieties over their families and psychological/psychiatric
disorders during and after the conflict, and often these are suffered
silently. The fact that men and women experience life differently
regardless of war or peace has to be taken into consideration especially
after the conflict period when issues of redress are being brought
up.
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