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Women refugees in South Africa claim rape and torture at home
IRIN News
December 07, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56659
JOHANNESBURG - The South African government
has been condemned for its "complete silence" over the high level
of rape reported by Zimbabwean women applying for asylum, at the
hands of the security forces in their country.
At least 15 percent of the Zimbabwean
women refugees who visited a counselling centre run by the Zimbabwe
Torture Victims/Survivors Project (ZTVP) in Johannesburg over the
past 20 months alleged they had been raped.
"The most frequent perpetrators reported
were supporters of the ruling party, Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic
Front (ZANU-PF) ... state agents - police, army and Central Intelligence
Organisation [CIO] - were reported too, with the police being the
most frequent state agency reported," said the study by the ZTVP.
The ZTVP is a partner project of the
Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation, an NGO that
helps communities deal with violence. The project offers medical
assistance, counselling and limited social assistance to Zimbabwean
survivors of torture now living in South Africa.
Ahmed Motala, executive director of
the centre and a human rights lawyer, lashed out at the South African
government for its alleged tacit approval of attempts to block moves
to censure Zimbabwe at the United Nations, the African Union and
in the Southern African Development Community. "We urge the South
African government, now that it is also a member of the UN Security
Council, to become more vocal against Zimbabwe."
The ZTVP report, 'Women on the Run:
Female Survivors of Torture Amongst Zimbabwean Asylum Seekers and
Refugees in South Africa', was released on Thursday to coincide
with the global campaign, '16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence',
which ends on International Human Rights Day on 10 December. The
report based its findings on interviews conducted with 102 women
assisted at the centre between February 2005 and September 2006.
Zimbabwe, once a middle-income country,
has become the world's fastest shrinking economy outside a war zone.
An inflation rate of around 1,200 percent has pushed the price of
even a basic shopping basket beyond the reach of many Zimbabweans,
who have sought refuge in neighbouring South Africa. An estimated
three million Zimbabweans are now live abroad: one-quarter of Zimbabwe's
domestic population.
About 32 percent of all alleged torture
survivors who were sought out by the ZTVP during the 20-month period
were women. At least 67 percent of the women at the centre said
they had been politically active in some way when they lived in
Zimbabwe, and 43 percent described themselves as members of the
opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
Last month, a Human Rights Watch report
alleged that the systematic abuse of rights activists, including
excessive use of force by police during protests, arbitrary arrests
and detention, had intensified in Zimbabwe in the past year.
The ZTVP report contained harrowing
accounts of sexual violence. The most recent case was a woman, identified
as 'X' to protect her identity, who claimed she had been raped by
the police after she attended an MDC meeting in April this year,
in the Zimbabwean capital, Harare. She was allegedly held in a police
station for three days without food and on her release was forced
into a van and taken to a isolated area and raped by a policeman.
"She [X] tried to resist. She was trampled
upon, and burnt with a cigarette on her thighs and buttocks. The
perpetrator ejaculated inside her vagina and smeared his semen all
over her body. He also urinated on her. He did this so that she
could not forget the experience. She was taken back to Harare police
station and instructed to bathe herself. She was also threatened
with death should she inform anyone," said the report.
In a snap survey by ZTVP in 2005, 30
percent of the women complained that they had suffered political
violence, and 44 percent reported having been denied access to food
because they were opposition supporters.
Only 36 percent of the women interviewed
for the report had been given asylum seeker status, and a mere two
percent had been given refugee seeker status (an asylum seeker is
a person who has applied for refugee status). The report commented
that these figures should cause the "South African authorities serious
embarrassment".
Jacob van Garderen, national coordinator
of the Refugee and Migrant Rights Project at Lawyers for Human Rights,
a South African NGO, said South Africa was struggling to clear a
backlog of 7,000 applications by Zimbabwean asylum seekers. "This
is besides the 11,000 fresh application filed since the beginning
of this year [2006] until June."
He described the process of granting
asylum or refugee status as "difficult" and long. "It can take a
year to get an appointment with the department of home affairs to
fill in the form to apply for asylum or refugee status." During
that period, many asylum seekers end up being deported back to the
country where they feared prosecution, which was against the South
African constitution, van Garderen said.
Vincent Hlongwane, a South African
government spokesman defended Pretoria's failure to tackle Zimbabwe
over its rights record. He said South Africa did not "believe in
talking down" to Zimbabwe, which was a "sovereign state". "It is
for the people of Zimbabwe to resolve their problems themselves,"
he said. "We can only assist them. Besides, the former Tanzanian
president [Benjamin] Mkapa has been mandated by the AU to help Zimbabwe,
and we have full confidence in his abilities."
IRIN was unable to get comment from
the Zimbabwean government, which has consistently denied claims
of torture and abuse in the country.
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