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Understanding
sexual harassment
Jephiter
Tsamwi
November 01, 2012
Zimbabwe has
been internationally recognised as a nation with world class quality
education system. And with the continued government and stakeholder
intervention, the country continues to advance in terms of service
delivery and access to education for.
However, it
is apparently clear that with the current economic challenges that
have seen the government failing to provide adequate support especially
for the tertiary institutions, students are experiencing one of
the toughest times in their education. While economic challenges
have always been regarded as the major hindrance to the full access
to education, there appears to be the other side of it that everyone
seems to be very unaware of.
Recently, Students
And Youths Working on Reproductive Health Action Team (SAYWHAT),
a student membership-based organization whose thrust is to address
the sexual and reproductive health challenges of students in Zimbabwe's
tertiary undertook an assessment to find out the real challenges
that are currently being faced by students in some colleges in Harare
and surprisingly, sexual harassment top the list. This was very
interesting to me in as much as it was a very disturbing discovery
considering that this area seem to be getting very minimum attention
from the responsible authorities.
But speaking
to the students themselves, it is noticeable that at times they
do harass each other unknowingly. This raised my enthusiasm as well
to find out what really constitute sexual harassment and do we really
recognise this as a challenge in the country not only within academic
institutions but even at workplaces and in the entire society in
general Perhaps one of the first person to carry out a study on
sexual harassment was a researcher called Fred Zindi, back in 19194
where he carried out a survey of 16 tertiary institutions in the
country to asses and analyse if sexual harassment was really a problem
in tertiary institutions His findings reported that actually more
than 95 percent of the students in his study sample acknowledged
the existence of sexual harassment in all its manifestations: lecturers
to students, students to lecturers or students to students.
Today, another
study by Almon Shumba, "Sexual Harassment of College Students
by Lecturers in Zimbabwe," still show wide evidence of the
existence of this challenge. This brings to question on what exactly
are the responsible ministries or even college authorities themselves
doing to address this challenge which accordingly since 1994 is
still persisting in our nation's institutions. Perhaps there is
a need to understand why sexual harassment needs to be addressed
as an urgent issue; the effects are not far to seek as much as they
are extremely damaging to the wellbeing of the victim. Sexual harassment
can result in serious psychological problems such as fear, anger,
depression, distress, stress, anxiety, confusion, irritability,
loss of self-esteem, feelings of humiliation, helplessness, vulnerability,
worry and alienation. But what really is sexual harassment? The
Zimbabwe Labour Relations amendment Act defines sexual harassment
in its section 8(h) as: "Unwelcome sexually determined behaviour
towards any employee, whether verbal or otherwise, such as making
physical contact or advances, sexually coloured remarks or displaying
pornographic materials in the workplace." The Zimbabwean law
does indeed recognise sexual harassment as an offense but perhaps
the interpretation of the law is what still needs further exploration.
Recognising the possibility of sexual harassment at the workplaces,
sexual harassment seem to be more prevalent in tertiary institutions
than it is in the workplaces. The levels of vulnerability are much
higher to the college students due to a number of pressures that
makes the student, mainly the female student fall victim to the
challenge so easily. In her report "The Price of Education:
Sexual Abuse and HIV/AIDS at Zimbabwe Universities" sometime
in 2011, journalist Chumile Jamela noted that "Lecturers and
other well-to-do men often target them for what they see as cheap
sex . . . .. With colleges charging between $400 USD and $800 USD
per semester, in a country where some employees go for months without
salaries, some students actually solicit sex. They flirt and make
advances on their lecturers in order to afford fees, accommodation,
toiletries, and food, effectively creating an unending cycle of
sexual abuse. Females are cynically seen as having an advantage
over male students, as they can use sex - voluntarily or by force
- to get their degrees and diplomas." While there is no tangible
evidence that this writer can put across here to confirm or deny
the allegations by Chumile, it is pretty much difficult to completely
deny the fact that there is a problems somehow within the colleges
about this issue. The UN organisation called Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission (EEOC) defines sexual harassment as unwelcome sexual
advances, requests for sexual favours, and other verbal or physical
conduct of a sexual nature when. Submission to such conduct is made
either explicitly or implicitly a term or condition of an individual's
employment, or submission to or rejection of such conduct by an
individual is used as a basis for employment decisions affecting
such individual, or such conduct has the purpose or effect of unreasonably
interfering with an individual's work performance or creating an
intimidating, hostile, or offensive working environment. In Zimbabwe,
it is however refreshing to note that there are currently tertiary
institutions that have already established some sexual harassment
policies as a measure to reduce the cases of sexual harassment.
Part of the findings by all the researches focussed on this area
which this writer came across categorically stated the absence of
sexual harassment policies as a major factor leading to the persistence
of sexual harassment in colleges.
Policies can
help create guiding principles, monitoring and reporting systems
that assist in dealing with the issues. In as much as there are
notably chapters in the various college acts that address gender
issues, sexual harassment seem to be forgotten. Bindura University
of Science Education and Africa University remains the only two
tertiary institutions with well-defined sexual harassment policies.
While other universities have tried to indirectly address the issues
to do with that by ensuring compulsory Gender modules for all students,
the effectiveness of the strategies are yet to be recorded.
The EEOC notes
that sexual harassment includes many things and that can be either
verbal, nonverbal or physical harassment. Verbal harassment may
include, referring to an adult as a girl, hunk, doll, babe, or honey;
whistling at someone, cat calls; making sexual comments about a
person's body; making sexual comments or innuendos; turning work
discussions to sexual topics; telling sexual jokes or stories; asking
about sexual fantasies, preferences, or history; asking personal
questions about social or sexual life; making kissing sounds, howling,
and smacking lips; making sexual comments about a person's clothing,
anatomy, or looks; repeatedly asking out a person who is not interested;
telling lies or spreading rumours about a person's personal sex
life.
Non-verbal would
include things like looking a person up and down (Elevator eyes),
staring at someone or blocking a person's path while.
Considering
the above noted components, it is apparently clear that as a society
we are guilty of committing sexual harassment regularly if not on
daily basis. This writer can confidently argue that one way or the
other, we have made people feel uncomfortable through any of the
above, or actually were at some point victims of sexual harassment.
The truth of the matter is that for the majority of the people in
the society, students included, they have faced sexual harassment
in different ways and in different places.
Physical harassment
on the other hand includes giving a massage around the neck or shoulders;
touching the person's clothing, hair, or body; hugging, kissing,
patting, or stroking; touching or rubbing oneself sexually around
another person and standing close or brushing up against another
person. If any of the above is done without the consent of the other
partner, then it can constitute sexual harassment.
Sexual harassment
is thus rampant in the societies we live and the extreme cases seem
to be witnessed daily at workplaces or in tertiary institutions.
I will sum up this argument by a view from Zindi in his research
on sexual harassment in tertiary institutions in Zimbabwe, he said,
"There is no doubt that a lot of women, even though they are
still under-reporting it, they experience sexual harassment . . . .The
relationship between a supervisor and a trainee (in tertiary institutions)
parallels with that between a therapist and a patient. There is
power differential. The doctor-patient issue raises sexuality issues
quite frequently and because of the doctor's or therapist's more
powerful position, it is he who should exercise self-control rather
than exploiting the vulnerability of the patient. Similarly lecturers,
employers or supervisors, it would seem, should follow their own
code of ethics by recognizing the vulnerability of people under
them and avoiding situations of eroticized transferences. Yet a
significant number of them seem reluctant to identify these dynamics
and pretend that their actions are guided by natural impulses. Consequently,
they refuse to accept their moral responsibility in such matters."
To create a
gender just society, free from sexual harassment cases, it starts
with every respective individual. Professionalism on the part of
seniors, bosses, lectures and any other person occupying superior
positions, would definitely make the society better. Sexual harassment
is an offense, and the more we strive to put an end to it, the more
we better or society.
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