HomeRights & JusticeZimbabwe child rape cases expose safety gaps for children among relatives

Zimbabwe child rape cases expose safety gaps for children among relatives

-

By Tendai Makaripe

Several Zimbabwean courts have handed down lengthy prison terms in child rape cases announced this week, including cases involving relatives of the victims.

Recent bulletins released by the National Prosecuting Authority of Zimbabwe detail separate convictions from Hurungwe, Hwange, Dete and Mberengwa involving girls aged 8 to 16.

In one case, a Hurungwe man was jailed for 35 years for raping his 12-year-old daughter.

Other courts sentenced men for raping a step-granddaughter, a niece and a 16-year-old relative.

Taken together, the cases point to a deeper child-protection problem: some children are most at risk in the very spaces meant to protect them.

In a 2023 child protection overview, UNICEF Zimbabwe said, “It happens in every country, even where children should be most protected, their homes, schools and online.”

That warning is echoed in Zimbabwe’s National Strategy to Prevent and Address Gender-Based Violence 2023–2030, which says, “Violence occurs in many settings, including the home, school, community and over the Internet.”

The strategy also notes that perpetrators of violence against children can include family members and other trusted adults.

That is what makes abuse by relatives especially dangerous.

Children often depend on those adults for food, shelter, transport or school fees, which can make disclosure harder.

A 2023 study published in BMJ Open, a peer-reviewed medical journal, found that in Zimbabwe, 57.3% of children who had experienced physical or sexual violence did not know where to seek formal help, while only 9.6% knew where to seek help and actually did so.

The study said, “Most children who did not seek help reported that they felt at fault or that their safety would be put at risk by disclosure.”

In one of the NPAZ bulletins, prosecutors said, “The home must be a sanctuary, not a place of peril.”

That captures the real meaning of these cases.

The convictions show the courts can punish offenders, but they also expose how easily trust, silence, and dependence can trap children in abuse.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

LATEST POSTS

Grade 7 exam pressure leaves pupils with little time to rest

By Tendai Makaripe By Wednesday, the Grade 7 pupil already feels tired as the Grade 7 exam pressure stretches the school day into early mornings, late...

New platform seeks to close learning support gap for Zimbabwean children

By Tendai Makaripe Zimbabwean education technology developer Nyaradzai Mazviwanza has launched Chikoro.net, a digital learning platform to help close the learning support gap for learners. The platform...

Zimbabwe approves policy to protect children from online abuse

By Tendai Makaripe HARARE, Zimbabwe — Zimbabwe has approved a new policy to protect children from online abuse as concerns grow over cyberbullying, grooming, sextortion, harmful...

Government renews pledge to end period poverty at Murewa launch

By Nyasha Rimbi MUREWA, Zimbabwe — The government pledged Monday to expand access to affordable menstrual health products, information and services in a renewed push to...

Follow us

393FansLike
276FollowersFollow
29SubscribersSubscribe
spot_img

Most Popular

spot_img