Daily Nation Newspaper

Women protest against sexual violence in Malawi

-

LILONGWE - Dozens of women took to the streets of Malawi’s capital on Monday to protest against sexual violence after a series of alleged police assaults on women last year.

About 90 protesters, most of them women, marched through Lilongwe in silence to mark She Decides Day - a global movement launched in 2017 after organisati­ons that talk about abortion were barred from receiving U.S. government funding.

“I’m here because I am against men raping women each and every day,” said

Eunice Kachimela, a 13-yearold student from Lilongwe.

“My friend was raped and we took the case to court, which made me so passionate. We need to speak up so things can change.”

Chimwemwe Mlombwa, one of the organisers, said some of the protesters chanted a traditiona­l saying that translates as “every girl has a right to decide, don’t ruin her future simply because she is a girl.”

The march comes amid a rise in feminist activism in

Malawi, where rape is widespread, but rarely reported due to stigma, lack of access to the judicial system and a cultural normalisat­ion of sexual abuse.

But the issue burst into the open last year when a number of women and girls accused the police of sexually assaulting them during violence that followed a disputed presidenti­al election in May.

Malawi’s Women Lawyers Associatio­n has filed an applicatio­n for a judicial review, arguing that a “failure to investigat­e promptly and take action against perpetrato­rs violates the women’s constituti­onal rights.”

Police spokesman James Kadadzera said via WhatsApp message the force was currently investigat­ing complaints from 17 women.

WHO says world in uncharted territory

GENEVA - The world has entered uncharted territory in its battle against the deadly coronaviru­s, the UN health agency warned, as new

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zambia