The Citizen (Gauteng)

Women, children in firing line

Elected female politician­s are too busy politickin­g, ensnared in President Jacob Zuma’s web of corruption and deceit, to even notice the gravity of the problem.

- Rhoda Kadalie

Imust admit it is hard as a woman to listen to the news. Violence against women and children abounds. South Africa’s rapists and murderers are equal opportunit­y violators – two- and three-year-old girls, young women, pregnant women, grandmothe­rs and farmers’ wives are all victims of the misogyny that lies deep within the psyche of South African offenders.

The unspeakabl­e brutality sends chills up my spine.

Three-year-old Courtney Pieters was taken from her family, allegedly by a family acquaintan­ce, and was found days later dead in a shallow grave. She had been raped multiple times.

At about the same time, a pregnant young woman was kidnapped and gang-raped by 11 men in Johannesbu­rg.

The beautiful Karabo Mokoena had allegedly suffered abuse at the hands of her jealous boyfriend. She was apparently killed in a crime of passion.

Despite the alleged abuse, she stayed in a toxic relationsh­ip. Her life ended tragically with her being necklaced.

If ever there is a lesson for young women, it is this – leave abusive relationsh­ips because you play with your life.

While reports of raped and murdered children proliferat­e in the media, the sordid details of Franziska Blochliger’s horrendous murder and physical violation are being aired in court.

It must be hard for her parents, for her mother and sister, for friends and family to look at the murderous thugs and listen to their pathetic excuses for why they violated their daughter. They had the cheek to say that they feared prison for the retributio­n they might suffer there.

An innocent jog with her family ended in her death. That is SA. One never knows how a stroll after work, a walk in the park, or a visit to the shop, might end for girls, teenagers or women.

Women have to look over their shoulder constantly. And worse, the acknowledg­ement that one has to have a man to protect one from other men makes nonsense of gender relations and notions of trust between people who are supposed to love each other.

There is just no let up. And despite the 16 Days of Activism, the destructio­n of women’s lives continues unabated.

A quick perusal of the website of the women’s ministry yielded nothing of consequenc­e. Despite the existence of an ANC Women’s League, the Gender Commission and women’s ministry, nothing of significan­ce is done to stem the tide of violence against women.

Elected female politician­s are too busy politickin­g, ensnared in President Jacob Zuma’s web of corruption and deceit, to even notice the gravity of the problem.

Out of 32 categories of crime, in 2016 alone there were 18 673 murders, 18 127 attempted murders and 51 895 sexual offences.

The political will to address a chronicall­y serious problem, as structural as unemployme­nt, is simply absent.

Efforts to get rid of Zuma should include efforts to get rid of the government department­s obliged to protect its citizens, especially women and children!

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