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The costs of marital rape in Southern Africa
Nada
Ali, Human Rights Watch
August 18, 2008
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/08/18/zambia19649.htm
For years now, women's
groups in Southern Africa have campaigned tirelessly to ensure that
the Southern African Development Community adopt the Protocol on
Gender and Development. Yesterday, the SADC finally took that historic
step. Member states will be obliged to amend their laws to ensure
equal rights for women across a wide range of issues, from provisions
that require member states to enshrine equality in their constitutions,
to firm commitments to reduce maternal mortality by 75 per cent.
But while that's a cause for celebration, the Protocol still
does not refer explicitly to domestic violence, and it still doesn't
oblige states to introduce legal provisions that criminalise marital
rape.
Women's groups
face huge hurdles to make that happen.
While a few SADC countries already have provisions in their legal
frameworks to that effect, in a number of other Southern African
countries, women's groups are being told, again and again,
by policy makers and traditional leaders, that it would be difficult
to convince the "ordinary man on the street" that having
sex with his "lawfully wedded" wife can ever be rape,
and a crime. SADC leaders, who in the same Protocol make commitments
to stepping up HIV prevention and treatment, need to understand
that the effects of domestic violence, including marital rape, can
seriously undermine any efforts to combat the pandemic.
On the ground, the evidence is plain. When I interviewed women in
Zambia last year, it became clear very quickly that victims of domestic
violence, including marital rape, are at increased risk of HIV infection
and their ability to get effective HIV treatment is drastically
undermined. The Zambian women I met told me that domestic violence
at the hands of their husbands and intimate partners and their fear
of such violence had a direct, harmful impact on their ability to
start and continue using HIV treatment.
One woman, who hid her HIV status and medication to avoid violence
at the hands of her husband, told me: "Sometimes I miss a
dose [of antiretroviral treatment] when my husband comes back at
six o'clock, drunk, closes the door and says, 'Today
you are going to freak out.' He locks [me] in, he beats me up and
locks me out of the house . . . . As a result of that I miss doses
sometimes. I feel very bad. I don't even feel like taking
the medicine."
This stark picture shows exactly how a lack of commitment to fighting
domestic violence, marital rape and gender inequality could make
fighting the HIV pandemic harder - and could cost SADC countries
universal access to HIV prevention and treatment. This is why women's
groups must continue to press governments to do more to combat domestic
violence, until the idea that marital rape is a contradiction in
terms becomes a thing of the past.
*Dr Nada Ali is a researcher in the Women's Rights division
of Human Rights Watch
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