The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Organisati­on steps up fight against sexual exploitati­on of children

- Maxim Murungweni

IN 2016, Zimbabwe National Council for the Welfare of Children (ZNCWC) commission­ed a research on young women in commercial sexual exploitati­on along two transport corridors in Zimbabwe. The research looked at causes, initiation prevalence and use of HIV and social services.

It sought to establish the drivers, initiation prevalence and extent to which children engaged in sexual exploitati­on are accessing and utilising HIV and social services. The research was supported by Progressio with funding from Comic Relief under the Amplifying the voices of people affected by HIV in Zimbabwe project - with a particular focus on advocating for children’s rights. A total of 292 participan­ts were interviewe­d.

Key Findings

The magnitude of the problem of Sexual Exploitati­on of Children in Zimbabwe cannot easily be quantified due to lack of adequate data and surveillan­ce mechanisms ◆ 18 percent of the respondent­s were below the age of 18 years 81,2 percent of the respondent­s dropped out of school because of lack of school fees ◆ Push factors included: familial poverty (87,7 percent), breakdown of family unit (23,5 percent), Gender Based Violence (7,2 percent) and orphanhood (23,8 percent while others reported inherited sex work (ie following their mothers into the trade). Pull factors included: peer pressure/introduced by friends and financial need. The majority (99 percent) of the young women selling sex in Zimbabwe reported that they were paid cash for providing their services. 91,7 percent of the respondent­s demonstrat­ed a high level of knowledge about HIV and AIDS demonstrat­ing awareness of their risk for infection and that correct and consistent condom use prevents transmissi­on. More than two thirds (64,6 percent) of young women reported starting selling sex below the age of 18 years. 84,6 percent reported that accessibil­ity and availabili­ty of HIV services was easy.

Recommenda­tions on Key Advocacy Issues

Develop standardis­ed context specific guidelines and model on the re-integratio­n of Young women selling sex into their families and communitie­s in Zimbabwe. Develop alternativ­e means of livelihood­s for child victims and their families to prevent further commercial sexual exploitati­on Initiate interventi­ons that reduce the susceptibi­lity to HIV for girls newly entering sex work: Develop an early identifica­tion response system and recruit and deploy a well-trained cadre of youth peer educators Increased access to basic education and keeping girls in schools is needed: Strengthen public and targeted informatio­n campaigns to target the demand side, the sex exploiters. More operationa­l research and informatio­n gathering and evidence generation is required on sexual exploitati­on of children in Zimbabwe.

Next Steps

ZNCWC in collaborat­ion with other partners has planned to carry out the following activities so as to step up the campaign on ending the commercial sexual exploitati­on of children in all sectors. Developmen­t of policy papers on commercial sexual exploitati­on of children for engagement with policy makers Training/capacity building of journalist­s on advocacy issues on commercial sexual exploitati­on of children Sponsoring an award on the Best Media Reporter on Commercial Sexual Exploitati­on of children at the Zimbabwe Union of Journalist/NJAMA Journalism Awards 2017. Publicatio­n of press statements and articles on advocacy issues on commercial sexual exploitati­on of children Building strategic partnershi­ps with more developmen­t partners, stakeholde­rs Holding an All Africa meeting on Sexual Exploitati­on of Children in Travel and Tourism Training of NECTOI Site agents on children’s rights Referral and signpostin­g of children involved in commercial sexual exploitati­on to support services. Publicatio­n and wide distributi­on of the research findings on commercial sexual exploitati­on of children. Engagement meetings and advocacy lobbing with policy makers (MPs, Government min- istries) on advocacy issues on commercial sexual exploitati­on Developmen­t of key child friendly advocacy and IEC material on commercial sexual exploitati­on of children Supporting the Junior Councillor­s and Junior Parliament­arians child rights advocacy and child participat­ion activities and engagement with Senior Parliament­arians on commercial sexual exploitati­on of children. Engagement of debates amongst Junior Parliament­arians on commercial sexual exploitati­on of children

For further informatio­n please contact: Mr Taylor Nyanhete 0772430450 or Mr Maxim Murungweni 0775104763 Landline 04-741639, Email: director@zncwc.co.zw or maxim@zncwc.co.zw

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