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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of articles surrounding the debate of the Domestic Violence Bill
Not
just another murder: International Women's Day, March 8th
Bev Clark
March 06, 2006
http://firepussy.gnn.tv/blogs/13487/Not_just_another_murder_International_Women_s_Day_March_8th
I got a notice from
my local post office last week notifying me that I had received a parcel.
Origin: Kenya. Because of lack of business, the post office called Kamfinsa,
has transformed itself into a kind of art gallery. These days it costs
about Z$40 000 to post a letter so its not as if people are queuing up
to write home. Many of the counters people once used for postal chores
are now used as sculpture stands. If the cost of posting letters is out
of the reach of most Zimbabweans then I-m not sure how many sculptures
get sold. But they do brighten up the place.
Turns out that my
parcel from Kenya was a book, Broken
bodies, broken dreams: violence against women exposed from the Integrated
Regional Information Network (IRIN). It seemed a very timely arrival seeing
as 8th March is International Women-s Day. That night I started
reading it in bed and any chance of sleep was swiftly snuffed out.
Broken bodies, broken
dreams covers all kinds of violence against women from the sexual abuse
of children, female genital mutilation (FGM), dowry crimes and bride-price
abuse, the abuse of older women and intimate-partner violence. It illustrates
the violence through personal testimonies as well as very vivid and evocative
photographs, mostly in black and white.
Some statistics
jumped out:
- On average five
Indian women a day are killed in "accidental" kitchen fires
because dowry payments have not been met. Although India outlawed the
modern dowry system in 1961, the practice has escalated among the expanding
middle class, crossing religious, socio-economic and ethnic boundaries.
- 25% of girls and
8% of boys around the world have been subjected to child sex abuse.
- The United Nations
estimates that one in three females will be beaten, or raped in her
lifetime.
The stories, the statistics,
the photographs obviously don-t make for pleasant bedtime reading
but Broken bodies, broken dreams: violence against women exposed, got
me thinking about violence against women closer to home.
Many years ago I visited
a small Mozambican town called Vilancoulos. It-s a kind of a lazy,
laid back place with not a whole lot going on - at least back then.
Some friends and I were looking for a place to stay and ended up spending
the night at a little guesthouse run by a South African woman. We had
a good night even if it was interrupted with us fending off a couple of
tsotsis (thieves) who tried to break into our car. Our host was very much
a part of life in Vilancoulos contributing to the town through her tourism
venture. She also started informal house discussions with local women
to talk about HIV/AIDS, condoms and sexual health.
Turned out that some
of the men about town didn-t take kindly to women taking their sexual
health seriously. One night she got a visit from a gang of men who had
come to teach her a lesson. She was gang raped, she had cigarettes put
out on her body, and if that wasn-t enough, they tied her to the
back of a car, front first, and dragged her through the streets of Vilancoulos.
She survived, as so
many women do, but the scars, both external and internal must be raw,
and deep and painful.
Last week I was reading
the Mail and Guardian, a weekly South African newspaper. One particular
headline caught my eye:
Not just another
murder
The article discussed
the rising number of hate crimes directed at the gay and lesbian community,
especially in the townships (ghettos) in South Africa. Zoliswa Nkonyana,
a young 19-year-old lesbian, was clubbed, kicked and beaten to death by
a mob of about 20 men on February 4th. They chased her, pelted her with
bricks and then finished her off with a golf club. When I read this article
I was reminded of the outrage and the enormous media coverage of the murder
of Matthew Shepard in the US. And I wondered to myself why Nkonyana-s
vicious assault took over two weeks to filter from the streets to the
media, finally ending up as a page 7 story in a weekly newspaper. Would
it have been different if Nkonyana had been middle class, middle aged
or a visiting foreigner like Amy
Bhiel, instead of just a queer girl from the ghetto?
And even closer to
home, here in Zimbabwe, I know so many, too many, women who have experienced
sexual abuse and violence, most often perpetrated by a close family member
or friend. Yes, those UN statistics that I mentioned earlier aren-t
a thumb suck. The million-dollar question is What Are We Going To Do About
It? Immediately a quote from Broken bodies, broken dreams: violence against
women exposed comes to mind: -
We need to voice
the violence, to hear the stories of all those affected by violence
. . . Spreading the word, breaking down the taboos and exposing the
violence that takes place among us is the first step towards effective
action to reduce violence in our own societies." - Gro Harlem
Brundtland
It starts with all
of us voicing the violence, telling our stories.
As fellow blogger
Sokari says:
Silence is not an
option.
For other writing
by Bev Clark, visit: http://firepussy.gnn.tv/
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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