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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
AIDS group cites rapes in Zimbabwe as terror tool
Lawrence
K. Altman, The New York Times
August 07, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/08/world/africa/08aids.html?_r=1&ref=africa&oref=slogin
A
13-year-old girl was abducted, then raped repeatedly over a two-week
period during a campaign of political terror in Zimbabwe surrounding
recent elections there.
Hers is one
of 53 cases documented by AIDS-Free World, an advocacy group investigating
rape as a political weapon in Zimbabwe, activists said Thursday
at a news conference at the 17th International AIDS Conference here.
Betty Makoni,
director of Girl
Child Network in Zimbabwe, said at the news conference, "Rape
is being used as a weapon of political intimidation to instill fear
in us, our families and communities." Youth militias have
raped an estimated 800 girls on bases, she said.
Other rape victims
include the wives, sisters, mothers and grandmothers of political
opponents, Ms. Makoni said. Some were teachers, ward leaders and
clergy members, she said. Some were raped in front of family members
and some men were forced to rape their mothers-in-law. The victims
were often forced to say they would never support the opposition,
she said.
"Pesticides,
sticks and other objects have been inserted in their vaginas,"
Ms. Makoni said.
Many victims
went to state hospitals to seek treatment to prevent pregnancy,
as well as H.I.V. and other sexually transmitted infections, she
said, but they were denied treatment, even when they were in pain
and bleeding. The victims said that doctors at government hospitals
did not treat them, fearing repercussions.
AIDS-Free World
is a Boston-based advocacy group that focuses on international AIDS
issues. Stephen Lewis, the co-director of the group, said it was
collecting evidence of rape and other atrocities committed in the
campaign that was aimed at the political opposition in Zimbabwe.
Rape and other atrocities have long been part of wars and political
campaigns in many countries. But the evidence for charges of atrocities
is often obtained long after alleged crimes.
Documenting
personal accounts now as well as collecting photographic and laboratory
evidence obtained soon after the alleged crimes, AIDS-Free World
said, should eventually make for stronger legal cases to present
to prosecutors under new governments in Zimbabwe than has been possible
in similar situations elsewhere.
Noah Novogrodsky,
a human-rights lawyer and the advocacy group's legal director,
said the evidence would also be shared with the office of the United
Nations high commissioner for human rights for possible prosecution
as crimes against humanity.
The United Nations'
latest report on AIDS says "widespread violence against women
not only represents a global human rights crisis but also contributes
to women's vulnerability to H.I.V."
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