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No
to state sponsored violence against women
Restoration of Human Rights (ROHR)
November 27, 2009
"For those
who suffer, isolation is their worst enemy and exposure of the atrocities
is their only hope."
Speak truth to power Kerry Kennedy
ROHR Zimbabwe
welcomes the commemoration of the United Nations 16 days of activism
against gender violence and would like to take the opportunity to
challenge all men particularly the state to desist from promoting
organized violence against women especially during times of political
tension as witnessed during last year's reign of terror March-June
2008.
Gender violence is a violation of women's
rights and should never be tolerated in its various degrading forms
which manifest in psychological and physical harm- rape, torture,
brutality, unlawful detentions and political slavery.
The plight of women's suffering during last
year's reign of terror can never be over emphasized. They
suffered traumatic experiences as both primary and secondary victims
when thousands of families were internally displaced by state agents,
youth militia, uniformed forces and ZANU Pf supporters.
In line with
this year's theme - Commit, Act and Demand, the state stands
accused as the major perpetrator of gross human rights violations
and therefore needs to take responsibility, assume an active leading
role to commit itself towards empowering not undermining women as
equal nation builders.
As the situation
stands today women in Zimbabwe are in a compromised position to
demand their rights due to the tyrannical state machinery and prohibitive
legislation like POSA
and AIPPA
which hinders freedom of expression. Women human rights defenders
have been subjected to massive intimidation campaigns to cow them
into submission. Numerous recorded cases show that democratic actions
like peaceful marches and protests attract brutal penalties from
the uniformed forces.
Women constitute 52% of the country's population
and yet they remain disempowered, disenfranchised and unfairly represented
in governance issues as mirrored by the outcome of the recently
negotiated coalition government in which the bulk of the negotiators
were men thrust to make decisions on behalf of women.
ROHR Zimbabwe encourages the government to lend
an ear to the various voices of victims of gender violence-the down
trodden women working daily for a small wage at Foothills farms
in Bindura to feed their families, the girl child from the rural
areas of Muzarabani yearning for equal opportunity and access to
education, the widowed young women in Guruve calling for a place
to farm who lost their breadwinners, property, livelihoods to political
violence of last year, the aged heartbroken women in Bikita who
were brutalized by the militia for their children's political
affiliation, the destitute orphans in Mtoko calling for justice
for their parents who were murdered by design for political expediency.
Visit the ROHR
fact
sheet
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