Gender-based violence: some solutions

gender_balanceI r e m e m b e r when I was a small child and in middle of the night and early hours of the morning I heard a cry, a scream, and other disturbing sounds; it was the women in my neighbourhood of Marondera responding to physical and mental abuse by their husbands.

My mother was not spared either. Women would be beaten, sometimes naked; they ran outside or help. I am therefore a product and a victim of Gender based violence (GBV) at household level. When I became a young adult at university, again some of the female students were psychologically and physically abused.

These students were beaten for refusing to have sex with men; and for starting a new love relationship. Now as a mother and professional I experience psychological gender based violence at various levels. What is silent in this trajectory of GBV is that women have also experienced this violence on the political scene – from the liberation war to jambanja and the crisis period which includes elections and Marange diamond fields abuses.

Women have been victims, perpetrators and agents of violence throughout electoral processes in Zimbabwe. They remain with permanent scars, some have died, and others have been injured, whilst most of them remain traumatized by past and continued incidents of violation of their fundamental right of enjoying peace, against violence. Women in the rural areas of Zimbabwe were known supporters of Zanu (PF).

However there was increasing discontent as a result of poverty and increasing suffering. The March 29 elections had

shown that the opposition party-MDC T had gained support in the rural areas and hence some rural constituencies were won by MDC-T. It is believed that the women in the rural areas had also voted for Morgan Tsvangirai betraying Zanu (PF). They had been the major recipients of food aid from government. It is believed that violence was unleashed to these

women after the March 29 elections. Operation Makavhotera papi which was implemented after the March 29 elections

sought to know who had voted for which party and candidates in the March 29 elections. In other words this defeats the whole purpose of your vote is your secret.

In fact this operation meant that both men and women do not have voting rights. This Operation is tantamount to removing the constitutional right to participate in elections. Gender based violence during the elections in Zimbabwe was perpetrated

against women whose husbands and sons had fled the harassment in the rural and urban areas. Some women and children who remained behind were tortured, killed and abducted. Their villages and property were destroyed. Their cattle, grain and property were looted.

Some of these women were forced to leave their homes. This means that womens livelihoods were disturbed as a result of this Gender based violence. Violence against women was used to punish them for supporting a political party. Pambazuka in 2008 reported that in Manicaland and MashonalandCentral women and girls were raped and abused by the youth militia. Women were tortured and abused in order to force them to tell where their husbands were hiding. They

were raped and or physically assaulted to force their husbands whom they suspected to be opposition parties to return home.

Sexual violence against women was also enforced to settle scores amongst families and individuals and precipitate their expulsion from the communities they lived. This led to displacements of women because of gender based violence during elections. Gender based violence became an issue during electoral processes in Zimbabwe because women were afraid to go and report their cases to the police who often said that such violence did not fall under their jurisdiction but its political issues which should be resolved at political levels. One can call this a decay of the rule of law. The problem was also elevated by the fact that the police were said to be abusing women during the crisis.

Hence whilst women are protected by law on rape, this becomes ineffective when the protection cannot be implemented.

Women and children should be confident and feel secure when they see a policeman or a soldier. There is therefore the

need to restore confidence to women that the security forces can protect women and their dignity during an electoral process.

Gender based violence during the elections have silenced women. They do not want to talk about it; they do not want

their cases recorded because they feel insecure about their future. This also applies to victims of rape during the conflict

period. Women prefer not to talk about their rape experiences because they are afraid of being chased away by their husbands and communities. Reporting about rape is seen as something that cannot be said openly. Women contracted

HIV/AIDS from such rape cases during election violence. Accessing antiretrovirals has never been easy for women

in the rural and urban areas.

Stocks of antiretrovirals in Zimbabwe are always inadequate. Women cannot afford to pay bus fare to get to the nearest clinic. Whilst there have been significant steps to fight against domestic violence in Zimbabwe through the enactment of

the Domestic Violence Act, gender-based violence still manifest itself in Zimbabwean society particularly in the election

and post-election period. The state should effectively prevent, investigate and prosecute violence against women. In the current set up, women are at risk on political violence. There should be institutional reforms which ensure that prohibition

against womens violence is guaranteed and any legislation will be applied effectively.

Womens economic empowerment reduces the risk of violence since it helps to promote financial independence, a sense

of social value and improved self-esteem. Women in Zimbabwe should continue to fight for their spaces so that they

can make significant contribution to development in Zimbabwe and for the future generations. Zimbabwean people should

preserve their ubuntuism and maintain the dignity and integrity of women.

– Dr Charity Manyeruke, University of Zimbabwe, Politics and Administrative Studies Department,manyerukecharity@yahoo.co.uk.

Post published in: Politics

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *