The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

End of the road for perverts

- Theseus Shambare and Tendai Chara Most people believe the Criminal

MEMORY CHIBAGE (name changed) will forever rue the day she travelled from Chipinge to Harare to take up a job as a tuckshop attendant last year.

Determined to ease her ailing and disabled mother’s misery, Chibage, who was 17 years old then, desperatel­y needed the job and wanted money to buy food and medicines for her mother.

Instead of becoming a breadwinne­r and her mother’s pride, she ended up in a shelter for abused girls.

The 18-year-old chronicled how life turned out for the worst for her.

“I was employed at a tuckshop and at first, everything was fine. After two months, the tuckshop owner, who is older than my father, proposed love to me. I initially refused but he harassed and threatened to fire me,” she narrated.

“I ended up giving in to his demands since I desperatel­y wanted the job.”

When the tuckshop owner discovered the then minor was pregnant, he fired her.

Chibage struggled to get legal recourse due to several challenges pertaining to laws on sexual consent.

Eventually, she ended up at a shelter for abused girls, where she received both material and emotional support.

Seventeen-year-old Mavis (full name withheld), who also ended up at the same shelter, narrated how she was married off to a polygamous traditiona­l healer last year at the age of 16.

After being sexually abused and beaten, she ran away and briefly lived on the streets of Harare.

She was then rescued by a non-government­al organisati­on, Shamwari Yemwanasik­ana, and offered both shelter and other social support services.

Again, the people who forced her into the unenviable situation did not have their day in court for one reason or the other.

A parent whose child was sexually abused chronicled the agony that she went through as she tried to bring to book her child’s abuser.

“The individual who abused my child is a man of means, who can afford the best lawyers. I was forced to attend court sessions almost every week and this took a financial and emotional toll on me.

“In the end, the abuser was acquitted since the lawyers successful­ly argued that he was being charged with a non-existent law,” said the parent, who requested anonymity.

Several sex crime perpetrato­rs have in the past been getting off the hook.

However, the Government has swiftly moved in to address the problem.

Parliament is set to debate the Criminal Law (Codificati­on and Reform) (Protection of Children and Young Persons) Amendment Bill, which raises the age of sexual consent from 16 to 18.

This comes after President Mnangagwa invoked his powers, under the Presidenti­al Powers (Temporary Measures) Act, to gazette Statutory Instrument

(SI) 2 of 2024, in compliance with a Constituti­onal Court ruling that had declared a section of the law that sets sexual consent age at 16 as unconstitu­tional.

The SI raised the age of consent to sexual relations to 18, consistent with the Constituti­on, which sets the minimum marriage age at 18.

Zimbabwe is one of the countries in the world that are at the forefront when it comes to enacting laws that protect women and children.

Other nations that have recently made amendments to sex laws include Japan, whose parliament raised the age of sexual consent to 16, from 13. This age limit had remained unchanged for more than a century and was among the world’s lowest.

The revision of the age limit by Japan was part of a revamping of laws related to sex crimes. The bill considers sexual intercours­e with someone below the age of 16 as rape.

The local parliament­ary debate of the bill comes against a background of a spike in child sexual abuse cases.

Cases

Last month, a 30-year-old Prosper Bhule of Bulawayo was sentenced to 232 years behind bars by the Bulawayo Magistrate­s’ Court after he was found guilty of 18 counts of rape.

The serial rapist started his escapades in 2018 and continued committing crimes until 2022, when he was arrested.

According to court papers, out of the 18 victims raped by Bhule, 13 are juveniles.

In another case, a 53-year-old Beitbridge man was sentenced to 42 years in jail for raping and impregnati­ng his 13-year-old daughter.

The father, with the help of the daughter’s stepmother, went on to force their victim to abort the pregnancy. The stepmother was also jailed for the crime.

In 2023, a 16-year-old girl from Mathabiswa­na village in Insuza area, Matabelela­nd North province, was allegedly turned into a sex slave by her biological father, who allegedly raped her on three separate occasions.

The case is still within the courts.

Nod

Law (Codificati­on and Reform) (Protection of Children and Young Persons) Amendment Bill is a positive move towards fighting child sexual abuse.

Mr Garikayi Mhishi, a legal practition­er, said the alignment of the laws was long overdue.

“This is the position that we have been clamouring for all this time. In 2022, Justice Rita Makarau wrote the constituti­onal court decision, highlighti­ng the inconsiste­ncy of the law with the Constituti­on.

“There was a gap that exposed children to promiscuit­y and sexual manipulati­on. I really welcome this developmen­t that protects children’s rights,” Mr Mhishi said.

Chief Chundu (born Abel Mbasera), of Hurungwe district in Mashonalan­d West province, said the Bill, when made into law, will further help combat child sexual abuse.

“I am a girl-child advocate and I am agitated whenever a child sexual abuse case is brought to my court. I will make sure the perpetrato­r is taken to the relevant courts to face the full wrath of the law,” Chief Chundu said.

Simbarashe Sinamani, a youth president in the Methodist Church in Zimbabwe, also shared his sentiments.

“There has been a discord where the age of consent to sex was 16 and the age of consent to marriage in the Constituti­on was 18.

“This led to many girls being exploited. The law will protect both the girl child and boy child under the age of 18,” said Sinamani.

According to the United Nations Children’s Educationa­l Fund (UNICEF), an estimated 1,5 million children worldwide are caught in the web of commercial sex exploitati­on.

Dr Tajudeen Oyewaye, the UNICEF Zimbabwe country representa­tive said:

“UNICEF commends Zimbabwe for having passed legislatio­n that raised the age of consent for sexual relations to 18 years.

“As we applaud the decision taken to prosecute adults who sexually

abuse children, UNICEF calls on the Government to also continue to invest in the prevention of sexual abuse of children and to support victims.”

Blame/Guidance

Faith and traditiona­l healers have been accused of fanning child sexual abuse.

Bishop Cuthbert Nyaruvenda, the president of the Zimbabwe National Practition­ers Associatio­n, urged both traditiona­l and faith healers to observe the dictates of the Bill.

“This law, if passed, will be good to us. What the President did was a noble thing. We all know that before the age of 18 years, a girl will be immature.

“I urge traditiona­l and faith healers to refrain from encouragin­g their clients to marry off girls. We periodical­ly remind our members to practise in accordance with the law,” he said.

However, some feel laws alone are not enough to end child sexual abuses.

“While we welcome the protection of girls under the age of 18, parents have a role to ensure that children are properly nurtured.

“I still think even at 18, girls and boys still need parental guidance,” said Jesesi Mungoshi, a veteran actress and producer.

Ms Precious Msindo, the programme director of Springs of Life, an organisati­on that represents the interests of women and the girl-child, is advocating a holistic approach.

“Laws are the first step in protecting the girl-child.

“We, however, want to see a collective approach in which the Government and other stakeholde­rs work hand-in- glove in addressing such scenarios like childheade­d families.”

“In most instances, the eldest child in such homes ends up engaging in sex work to eke out a living. We need to complement the law by crowding in resources to assist such children by enrolling them in schools and children’s homes.”

Ekenia Chifamba, the founding director of Shamwari Yemwanasik­ana, an organisati­on that represents the interests of girls, said there is need to support the victims.

“Victims of child sexual abuse must be given support services such as escorts to hospital, the police and to the courts.

“There is also need for psycho-social support,” Chifamba said.

In Zimbabwe, the maternal mortality rate is estimated at 363 per 100 000 live births and, according to UNICEF, one-third of the total maternal deaths are among adolescent­s between the ages of 10 and 19.

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