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Zimbabwean
women have had "more trauma" after independence
Human Rights
Tribune
November 17, 2008
http://www.humanrights-geneva.info/Zimbabwean-Women-Have-Had-More,3723
This is one
of the findings of a study conducted by the civic movement Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) on trauma in the collapsing southern
African state.
The study reveals the
complexities of the emergency caused by the political and economic
crisis. Trauma has not only been inflicted through direct violence
(beatings, torture and rape) but by food deprivation and a lack
of access to medical treatment and shelter.
State violence, economic
decline and the destruction of social capital have had severe consequences
for women.
According to
the research, most women interviewed experienced more incidences
of trauma after the country's independence from Britain in
1980 than before independence.
Of the 1,983 WOZA members
interviewed, 14 percent experienced a lack of food in 1979, compared
to a staggering 66 percent between 1980 and 1999. While nine percent
did not have access to medical treatment in 1979, this figure shot
up to 24 percent between 1980 and 1999. Similarly, while six percent
did not have access to shelter in 1979, 12 percent reported a lack
of shelter between 1980 and 1999.
From 2000 the incidences
of ''experienced trauma'' were annually
higher than incidences of ''witnessed trauma''.
Children, who are often in the presence of their mothers during
these incidents, are equally victimised. Stephanie Nieuwoudt spoke
to Jenni Williams, national coordinator and one of the founders
of WOZA. WOZA is the Ndebele word for ''come forward''.
IPS:
How do women survive financially in a country where the price of
a loaf of bread is millions of Zimbabwean dollars?
Jenni Williams: That is the trillion dollar question.
The answer is that we simply do not know how it is done. In Zimbabwe,
it is a huge achievement if one manages to send your children to
bed at night with one meal in their bellies.
I was at a conference
in South Africa where I ate three meals a day at the hotel where
I was staying. I felt sick. My system could not handle three meals
a day. Zimbabweans do not eat that much any more. The meals we have
are substandard.
Yet women survive. They
are scavenging all the time. The informal trade is still very much
alive. A woman will, from somewhere, find a few vegetables to sell
at the side of the road and when they are gone she will look everywhere
to find more to sell.
Some people go shopping
in neighbouring countries and bring back goods to sell in Zimbabwe
or they look for piece work. They survive from day to day.
The efforts by (Zimbabwean
president) Robert Mugabe to criminalise informal trade have to stop
because it is an important part of the economy. For thousands of
people in Zimbabwe it is the only way they can survive.
It is mostly women who
are involved in informal trade. They are the ones who support their
families financially. The irony is that many of the top brass in
Zimbabwe who support the actions against illegal traders probably
come from homes where their mothers were informal traders.
Women are still the backbone
of rural agriculture, but they are mostly forced to hand over their
crops to the army.
Zimbabwe has great agricultural
potential. It was one of the most important agricultural countries
in Africa. It is an agricultural giant which has been forced into
unconsciousness. If women and other farmers can be supported with
inputs — seeds, fertiliser and so forth — there can
be a quick recovery.
The people in Zimbabwe
are ill. Their health is jeopardised by eating irregularly and when
they do eat, it is substandard produce. Many are HIV positive and
suffer from opportunistic HIV-related illnesses. But there are too
few people to care for the sick.
Many doctors and other
healthcare workers have left the country. There is no medicine.
It is even difficult to find a headache tablet. The hospitals are
like ghost towns.
Zimbabwe was one of the
most educated nations in Africa. Robert Mugabe promised free primary
education but the education system is in shambles.
Stress, trauma and illness
are killing people. The life expectancy of a woman is 34 and that
of a man 37. I am 46 and there are not many people of my age around.
IPS:
What has been the most surprising finding of the research WOZA did
on the trauma suffered by Zimbabwean women?
Jenni
Williams: On average we found that violence increased more
than three times since 2000. People suffered an average of more
than 16 events of trauma since 2000, compared to 2.9 in 1979 and
5.8 from 1980 to 1999.
The increase seems improbable
when one remembers that the 1970s was a time of open struggle. Yet
the figures prove that the increase since 2000 was dramatic. This
is under the rule of a man who was once regarded as a liberation
war hero. History will judge Robert Mugabe harshly for this.
It is also surprising
that when women do get counselling, they prefer to discuss issues
of displacement rather than their experiences of violence and torture.
IPS:
The report focused to a large extent on trauma suffered by women
in Matabeleland, in the south of the country. Why?
Jenni
Williams: My generation suffered under ''Gukurahundi''
- the 1980s conflict between government forces and opposition
movements in Matabeleland. Over 10,000 Ndebeles in this region were
executed by government forces. In one case 55 men and women were
shot and killed in one day.
People were burnt alive
in their huts or executed publicly. They were suspected of being
members of the opposition party Zimbabwe African People's
Union (ZAPU). These people suffered a lot of trauma.
There is huge support
for the opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change, in
Matabeleland. The people are ready to be mobilised.
IPS:
The members of WOZA are often beaten and thrown into jail. You were
arrested in March this year and a court case is still ongoing. In
August you were arrested again but released after being severely
beaten.
Jenni
Williams: WOZA has more than 60,000 members. It is a mass-based
organisation. But members know when they sign up that they run a
risk of being arrested and beaten.
We have workshops training
people on how to cope with reprisals. The members are totally committed
even though they know of the high risk.
Nine of our members were
arrested in August on the charge of malicious damage to property
after they wrote our WOZA slogan, ''Woza Moya''
(come healing spirit) on a road in Bulawayo.
I was arrested along
with 13 others in May when we protested against the election violence
in Zimbabwe. I was kept in prison for six weeks on the charge that
I would mobilise a Kenya-style uprising against the government during
the run-off election.
I was freed after (Movement
for Democratic Change leader) Morgan Tsvangirai withdrew from the
run-offs. This case is still pending.
Ironically we view police
stations as the final place to get a particular message across.
When we are imprisoned and it becomes news, we know the message
has hit home - people from around the world take notice of
what is happening in Zimbabwe.
We often do not get arrested
because the police officers are the sons of members. They know that
we are a community-based movement who address issues which are Zimbabwe's
issues and not just women's issues.
However, even though
some police officers understand what we do, the police remain the
main perpetrators of violence against us. When they arrest us, we
focus on telling them that we are fighting for a better Zimbabwe
with social justice for us and them. WOZA has a history of six years
of non-violent protest.
The people of Zimbabwe
live in fear all the time, regardless of who they are. There is
a deep awareness that one can be arrested at any moment and tortured
and killed. Our study revealed that repeated exposure to trauma
has a cumulative effect. Some 53 percent of the women who were surveyed
had scores indicative of a psychological disorder.
WOZA is investigating
models of peace and reconciliation in Rwanda and South Africa. Can
one really start thinking about healing while Robert Mugabe is still
in power?
It is of the utmost importance
that the people of Zimbabwe are healed. If healing does not take
place, we will continue to have a violent society. In South Africa
we are looking at what the Truth and Reconciliation Commissions
achieved and in Rwanda we are looking at the Gacaca courts.
WOZA was founded because
of the oppressive regime of Mugabe and, in spite of him, it grew
into a massive organisation. We need a structure to promote the
agenda of healing. In the meantime we have ways and means of accessing
people and helping them on a one-to-one basis.
In the long term we hope
to engage the security forces as well. We need some form of reconciliation
with the same people who are responsible for the trauma and atrocities.
By openly writing peace
slogans like ''Woza Moya'' on the streets
and marching against oppression, we show the next generation that
one can fight in a non-violent way against a terrible situation.
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