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ZIMBABWE:
Focus on rape as a political weapon
IRIN News
April 08, 2003
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=33358
JOHANNESBURG
- "In a Dark Time", a documentary film about sexual abuse in Zimbabwe
perpertrated by pro-government militia, premiered last week at Witwatersrand
University, one of South Africa's most respected tertiary institutions.
In the film, 16-year-old Sarudzai recalled how she was alone in
the family home with three younger siblings when militiamen surrounded
it. Her father was at a funeral. Her mother was in the bush, hiding
from the militia. Fearing they would set the hut on fire, Sarudzai
stepped out. She was raped right there, she said, to punish her
mother for supporting Zimbabwe's opposition party.
Sarudzai and other women featured in the documentary said their
attackers were militiamen known as the "Green Bombers", a government-created
youth brigade often accused of human rights abuse. For protection,
the film maker and women interviewed have remained anonymous.
The event, organised by Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research,
sought to alert academics and human rights activists about gender-based
human rights abuses, like gang rape and sexual torture, reportedly
taking place in Zimbabwe.
"We need to break the silence of academia and human rights institutions
in South Africa about what is happening in our neighbourhood," said
Dr Sheila Meintes, a member of South Africa's Commission on Gender
Equality and a lecturer in political studies at Witwatersrand University.
International human rights watchdogs like Amnesty International,
Human Rights Watch, the International Crisis Group and Physicians
for Human Rights have documented systematic rape and sexual torture
of women during Zimbabwe's political violence since 2000.
Last year, Amnesty International warned about "mounting reports
of rape and sexual torture by the militia, continuing the pattern
seen before presidential elections in March 2002".
Tony Reeler, regional human rights defender with the Institute for
Democracy in South Africa, described what he said was a new pattern
of sexual violence in Zimbabwe.
During 2000 and early 2001, human rights watchdogs documented widespread
torture of opposition supporters. About 40 percent of these were
women. They were beaten up, stripped naked and humiliated, but few
were raped or sexually abused.
After June 2001, rape and sexual torture of women became more prevalent
and brutal. It allegedly happened in front of family and neighbours.
As a result, the whole community experienced the psychological impact.
"One individual's physical torture becomes a mass psychological
torture," explained Reeler.
The Zimbabwean government has dismissed reports by local and international
human rights groups that rape is used as a political weapon.
"Yes, we have seen the allegations, but I don't need to tell you
that definitely these are fabrications," Betty Dimbi, an official
in the Department of Information told IRIN. IRIN was unable to get
further comment on Tuesday from the Zimbabwean government.
Rape remains the least condemned war crime, concluded the United
Nations Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women, referring
to Rwanda and other civil wars in the late 1990s.
The tide, though, is turning.
In 2001, in a historic decision to acknowledge rape as a war crime,
the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia began
prosecuting rapists. This, says Amnesty International, "challenges
the widespread acceptance that torture of women is an intrinsic
part of war."
The Rwanda Tribunal is explicitly empowered to prosecute rape as
a crime against humanity and a violation of the Geneva Conventions.
South African judge Richard Goldstone, a former prosecutor for the
Rwanda Tribunal, found that sexual assault can constitute torture
and be prosecuted as a transgression of international humanitarian
law.
International law condemns rape and other forms of sexual violence
as war crimes. The Geneva Conventions of 1949 were later strengthened
by Protocol II, which extends protection to victims of rape, enforced
prostitution or indecent assault during conflict.
Broadly, four kinds of rape can be identified in conflict.
- Genocidal
rape, as in Rwanda and the Balkans, seeks to destroy an ethnic
or political group perceived as being the enemy.
- Political
rape punishes individuals, families or communities who hold different
political views.
- Opportunistic
rape takes place when combatants run amok, assured of impunity
in a lawless context.
- Forced concubinage
involves the conscription or kidnapping of young girls to wash,
cook, porter and have sex with soldiers and militiamen. The Zimbabwe
Women Lawyers Association estimated that some 1,000 women were
held in militia camps in 2002.
The last three
forms of rape are found in Zimbabwe, said Reeler.
Tina Sideris, a South African researcher and activist on gender-based
violence, noted the general invisibility of sexual abuse of women
during conflicts in Southern Africa. Rape and forced concubinage
were frequent during the long-running civil wars in Mozambique and
Angola, but ignored in South African media and political circles,
she said.
Even in South Africa, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission "didn't
deal with rape as a gross human rights abuse. Women were raped in
detention and in guerrilla bases, raped by the enemy and by comrades,"
she noted.
The TRC devoted a great deal of time to the murder and torture of
freedom fighters, but only one day to listen to abused women. "Awareness
of the gender dimension in human rights abuses is missing," said
Meintes.
In conflicts throughout the world, sexual violence is routinely
directed at females as a conscious strategy, although commanders
and politicians may dismiss it as isolated incidents by rogue soldiers.
"Rape in conflict is a weapon to terrorize and degrade a particular
community and to achieve a specific political end," said a Human
Rights Watch report. "The rape of one person is translated into
an assault upon the community through the emphasis placed in every
culture on women's sexual virtue. The shame of the rape humiliates
the family and all those associated
with the survivor."
"I act, I feel differently from the other girls," Sarudzai said
in the documentary. "I am not a virgin any more. It happened against
my will. Maybe I have HIV. I wish I'd die. Then I'd feel no pain."
Sideris points out that post-conflict programmes don't deal adequately
with gender violence.
One reason is underreporting. Out of shame, economic vulnerability
and powerlessness, women keep quiet about sexual abuse.
In Zimbabwe, "the most vulnerable, the poorest, uneducated, unemployed
rural women like Sarudzai ... are abused, which makes it all the
more sinister," said Reeler.
"We have a responsibility to speak out against human rights abuses
and the time has come to do so," concluded Meintes.
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