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Incidents of Rape associated with Political Violence
Amani Trust Mashonaland
August 28, 2002
This statement has been issued in response
to several incorrect reports recently published in the local and international
media concerning politically motivated rape in Zimbabwe.
This statement is intended to correct any misconceptions and clear any
misrepresentations that
may have been created by these reports.
Amani Trust has been working with victims of
organized violence and torture (OVT) since 1993, and has published many
reports and papers over the past ten years on the effects of state organized
violence on community physical and mental health. Amani trust has been
working with communities in the rural areas, recording the prevalence
of organized violence and torture, both pre and post independence, and
testified in the Chidiyausiku Commission of Inquiry.
Over the past two years there has been a rapid
upsurge in organized violence and torture, and Amani Trust has been helping
to care for the victims and to meet the expenses for their medical treatment.
As a member of the Human Rights NGO Forum,
Amani Trust has provided data to the Forum on the numbers of victims and
the type of violence that the survivors have suffered, as well as the
names of the perpetrators, as many of the perpetrators are known to the
survivors.
The Human Rights NGO Forum releases monthly
reports in the form of The Monitor, which is widely distributed in Zimbabwe,
detailing human rights abuses in the preceding month.
Amani Trust releases occasional reports on
specific research topics, such as surveys of Farm workers and the violence
they have endured over the past two and a half years, research on the
psychological disturbances of victims, and research on the consequences
of testifying against the outcome of election results. Amani Trust has
previously given statements regarding its work, but it would appear that
certain sections of the media have chosen to ignore such statements. Amani
Trust only reports on testimony given by survivors, and all reports that
are given, are made on survivors that have sought help from the organization.
The incidence of rape that has occurred during
episodes of OVT is one of the many aspects that Amani Trust has monitored,
and on occasions has issued statements about.
Over the past three months ten women have sought
help from Amani after alleged rape because of their perceived political
affiliation. Some of the women had been assaulted some time prior to their
seeking of assistance, and some had been assaulted within a few days prior
to seeking assistance. In each case the victim was assisted in making
a Police report in Harare as they often gave the story of being unable
to make the report in their districts due to fear and the stigma attached
to being a victim of rape. Each victim also gave an affidavit to a lawyer,
and to a medical practitioner and forensic nurse. A number of the victims
were also assessed by a specialist psychiatrist and were offered the opportunity
for HIV testing after counseling. Counseling for the husband and family
were also offered. All medical complaints pertaining to the alleged assault
were treated by the appropriate specialist. Once treatment was completed
the survivors were given bus fares to return home. Many of the survivors
required return visits to Harare for further medical treatment.
Because of the intense media interest, both
local and foreign, of the plight of women in Zimbabwe, Amani Trust received
numerous requests for interviews with survivors. Because of the psychological
trauma of having to repeat the story of the sexual assault, Amani asked
a number of these victims if they would be prepared to participate in
a factual recorded video documentary about their experiences. The majority
of the survivors seen in the last three months were very willing to tell
their story, and then requested that they told their story in person,
rather than have actors in the documentary. These people have been participating
in the production of this documentary, to tell the plight of the ordinary
Zimbabwe woman and girl child to people both in Zimbabwe and the rest
of the world.
The use of the video is not for any court of
justice, as no legal system uses edited taped stories as evidence. All
redress for these victims will be sought through the normal channels of
justice.
It is repeatedly documented in investigations
of human rights abuses throughout the world, that the incidence of rape
is grossly under reported, because of the stigma and fear attached to
rape, and women and children are particularly vulnerable groups in society,
especially in the prevailing economic climate. Amani Trust knows that
many people are unable to seek assistance from any medical facility, and
that even when they do seek help they are reluctant to report that rape
has occurred. A number of studies by Amani Trust have shown that the incidence
of rape is far higher than what had initially been reported, and therefore
is able to comment that there is a high probability that there is far
more rape associated with political violence than has been reported to
both the medical and legal professions.
Amani Trust does not issue reports on survivors
it has not interviewed, examined and counseled. The Trust’s only concern
is the plight of the survivors of organized political violence, and it
is not affiliated to any political party or other external organizations.
Visit the Amani fact
sheet
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