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ZIMBABWE: Economic problems exacerbate violence against women
IRIN
News
December 05, 2002
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=31275
JOHANNESBURG
- Zimbabwe's economic problems are exacerbating violence against
women and their sexual exploitation, women's groups say.
"With all the economic problems, violence has taken a new twist,"
matrimonial lawyer Nomsa Ncube told IRIN on Thursday. Ncube was
one of the organisers of a march on government offices in Zimbababwe's
second city Bulawayo this week, to protest violence against women.
Over the last few years Zimbabwe has suffered serious economic problems.
Salaries have failed to keep pace with inflation which hit 144 percent
in October, and unemployment has risen. The land reform programme
has also seen farms change hands with thousands of farmers and farmworkers
facing an uncertain future.
The government has tried to intervene through price controls on
basic commodities, and by fixing the foreign exchange rate. But
this has spawned a lucrative market for hoarders and speculators
who have taken advantage of shortages.
"Our main concern at the moment is that women are being forced to
have sex with hoarders [of commodities]," Ncube said.
"The woman goes to the corner house where things are being sold
and she is served by a man usually between 19 and 25. She is charged
a very high price for maize and says she doesn't have enough money,
and her kids haven't eaten. He looks her over and says she has something
else to pay with and tells her to come back in the evening.
"I find that so cruel. A lot of women related the same experience,"
Ncube said. "We feel so frustrated. That's why we went and banged
our pots on the march."
Violence against women can also have a direct political dimension.
A researcher for an organisation that studies organised violence
said there were many cases of politically active women who supported
the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in the March
presidential election who were targeted for assaults, and sometimes
rape.
"There are still some new cases of assault and death threats, usually
because the women support the MDC," the researcher said.
Sheila Mahere, director of the Musasa Project, an organisation that
provides shelter for victims of domestic violence said: "We feel
domestic violence is on the increase and reporting on it is on the
increase, which is a good thing because it is not hidden."
But, she added, some women have been too frightened to lay charges
of assault, or because the perpetrator could be a bread winner.
"We have seen an increase in relation to the economic environment
in Zimbabwe. When you have shrinking resources in the home, this
can exacerbate a situation between spouses, it causes frustration
and unleashes violence. We don't want poverty to be an excuse for
violence, but it does exacerbate the situation," Mahere said.
The Zimbabwe Women's Resource Centre and Network (ZWRCN) have taken
another approach, and are currently calculating the losses domestic
violence causes the economy.
A similar American study found that companies reported they lost
anything between US $3-5 billion a year in profit from women and
men who missed work because of gender-based violence.
ZWRCN would calculate the cost to the economy of one or both spouses
dying, the cost to the government of sending an ambulance to help
a women who had been beaten, the cost of the investigating officer's
time and resources, and the cost to the courts and prisons as the
case was followed through, ZWRCN director Isabella Matambanadzo
said.
"We want to know what price we are paying for violence against women,"
Matambanadzo said.
For many women, new hope would come when the Domestic Violence Act,
drafted by the Musasa Project, in consultation with other organisations,
was finally passed.
Mahere said they were lobbying parliament and women's groups to
make sure the draft goes through unchanged and becomes law.
However, Zimbabwean women still needed support institutions like
a gender commission to ensure proper implementation of anti-violence
laws, she said.
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