The Midweek Sun

New law discourage­s withdrawal of GBV cases

Mayor of Gabrone calls for collective action

- BY SUN REPORTER

Mayor of Gaborone, Austin Abraham has pleaded with residents to improve efforts to ensure that Gender Based Violence (GBV) is uprooted by protecting women and girls and reporting incident cases to authoritie­s.

Addressing a full council meeting in Gaborone this week, the Mayor said that the only way that women and girls could reach their potential is if their rights are respected and protected.

He bemoaned the rising incidents of GBV, adding that it is dishearten­ing that while government has tried various interventi­ons to combat GBV, there continues to be more reports of horrific acts of abuse that include cold blooded killings.

“Children and women are degraded, bullied, defiled, raped and murdered and the disturbing trends of cyber bullying and rising incidents of missing persons compound the situation. The fair treatment of women and girls could therefore be a way of combating GBV.”

He was speaking on the backdrop of the annual internatio­nal campaign dubbed ‘16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence,’ which started on November 25 and ends on December 10.

This is a time where Government­s, individual­s and organisati­ons globally unite to call for the prevention and eliminatio­n of violence against women and girls.

Many victims of GBV tend to suffer in secret because they want to create an impression of happiness or fear judgment, while others fear the people who abuse them.

Seeing how many GBV victims were withdrawin­g cases, the judiciary and law enforcemen­t agencies adopted a policy discouragi­ng withdrawal of GBV related cases.

Ministry of Justice, Chief Public Relations Officer, Oteng Mokowe said that there is need to capacitate profession­als on laws from a perspectiv­e of gender responsive­ness to enable them to adequately intervene, adding that is the reason that government has prioritise­d reforming the justice system.

Botswana dialogue project on gender mainstream­ing within the justice system was influenced by growing concerns over GBV cases countrywid­e, according to senior magistrate,

Segametsi Basinyi.

“There are many cases of people who reported cases and later requested that they be withdrawn inconsider­ate of the resources expended. These withdrawal­s allowed perpetrato­rs to get off scot-free and to repeat the crime, while some victims lose their lives,” she said.

Basinyi explained that the disposal of GBV related cases took long due to lengthy processes such as investigat­ions, arraignmen­t, setting of trial dates, the trial itself, sentencing and appeals but through government interventi­ons, GBV related cases are given first priority.

“GBV related cases are urgent by nature against normal cases to avoid distortion of evidence,” she said. Basinyi said government had come up with various interventi­ons to address GBV, one of them being the introducti­on of specialise­d courts.

 ?? ?? CALLING FOR ACTION: Austin Abraham says the only way that women and girls could reach their potential is if their rights are respected and protected.
CALLING FOR ACTION: Austin Abraham says the only way that women and girls could reach their potential is if their rights are respected and protected.

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