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Politically
motivated violence against women escalates in Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum
December 08, 2006
Violence against
women in Zimbabwe, often politically motivated and perpetrated largely
by supporters of the ruling Zanu-PF party, police and other state
agents, has escalated over the past six turbulent years, the Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO said in a report released 8/12/2006.
Titled "A
Woman’s Place is in the Home?’’ – Gender Based Violence and Opposition
Politics in Zimbabwe, the 21-page report marks the annual 16 days
of international protests about violence against women.
The Forum urged
that the government be targeted during this year’s protests because
its actions ranging from the 2005 campaign of forced urban evictions
and demolitions which inflicted huge suffering on women in particular,
to condoning rape and other politically motivated brutal sexual
assaults. Another form of abuse is enforced cubinage of women and
girls at Zanu-PF youth training camps or militia bases set up on
farms seized from white owners in 2000-2002.
"There is
ample evidence that human rights abuses against women in particular
are prevalent in Zimbabwe, contradicting the government’s statements
that these abuses are exaggerations made by organizations supported
by the West,’’ said the report.
The worst instances
of violence against women were in 2000-2002 when Zanu-PF’s hold
on power was first seriously threatened. The assaults were motivated
partly by a perception that women have lesser status in society
and that they are the property of men.
The Forum received
967 reports of gender based violence during the six-year period,
out of more than 15,000 human rights violations reported.
But incidents
of sexual violence are seriously under-reported, said the Forum.
Most married women do not report attacks fearing being ostracised
by their husbands and others. Prejudice toward those considered
to be HIV positive is another motivation for silence.
Among harrowing
cases cited of "political rape’’ was that of a 16-year-old
girl raped by militia outside her family home to punish her mother
for supporting the opposition Movement for Democratic Change.
Other attacks
include beatings, death threats, kidnapping and torture.
In one way women
get equal treatment with men: during demonstrations by Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) protesting the impact of the worsening
economic conditions upon women.
"The women
are treated by the police in exactly the same way as their male
counterparts in respect of the appalling conditions under which
they are held (often together with their infant children), the excessive
and often brutal force used in affecting their arrest and lack of
provision of sanitary towels,’’ said the report.
Visit
the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum fact
sheet
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