Saturday Star

Rape epidemic turns teen girls into mothers

- WENDY JASSON DA COSTA, KARISHMA DIPA, NORMAN CLOETE AND SAMEER NAIK

SOUTH Africa’s rape epidemic has turned girls as young as 10 into mothers, and 60% of the time the fathers cannot be identified.

The number of girls aged between 10 and 14 years who gave birth between April 2017 and September 2021 increased by 48.7%, according to a report by Amnesty Internatio­nal SA this week.

Amnesty Internatio­nal SA’S executive director, Shenilla Mohamed, said: “It’s important to note that these are the number of births, not the number of pregnancie­s – bearing in mind some pregnancie­s ended in abortions and miscarriag­es.”

The organisati­on said this week it would run a campaign with True Love to highlight this crisis.

Save Our Children health and nutrition programme manager Marumo Sekgobela said they noted a massive spike in child pregnancie­s in 2020/21 after South Africa went into a hard lockdown for the Covid-19 pandemic.

Sekgobela said at the time there was limited access to health facilities and schools, which usually offered a protective environmen­t for young people.

“We also have to look at the issue of gender-based violence (GBV). These children are between 10 and 14, so somewhere, somehow there was a violation and these cases are not always reported.”

Sekgobela said they suspected many of the pregnancie­s were a result of rape because at that age children often didn’t even know what had happened to them.

He said in 60% of the cases no one knew who had impregnate­d the girls.

“We don’t know if it’s other children, which I doubt, or if it’s older boys and men,” he said.

Sekgobela said there was usually a generation­al gap in terms of relationsh­ips in South Africa, where it was not uncommon for 17-year-olds to date 22-year-old adults.

He said given the sharp rise in child and teenage pregnancie­s during lockdown, it appeared most violations happened at home or in their neighbourh­oods.

Sex with a child below the age of 12 is always regarded as rape, even if they say yes. And depending on the circumstan­ces and ages, sex involving older teenagers could also be considered statutory rape.

Of the 1 764 babies born in South Africa on January 1 this year, 65 were born to adolescent girls, of whom the youngest was 13. Between April 2020 and March 2021, 934 girls between 10 and 14 years old gave birth in Gauteng alone.

In June, Minister of Police Bheki Cele said 10 818 people had been raped between January and March this year and almost half of the cases had occurred in the homes of the victims or offenders.

The director of the Teddy Bear Clinic for Abused Children, Shaheda Omar, said the responsibi­lity of addressing the nation’s early-pregnancy crisis lay in educating young boys and men. “Males simply can’t be out of the equation when it comes to early pregnancie­s and must be part of the solution.”

Omar said GBV was also a contributi­ng factor.

“Young girls aren’t fully aware of their rights in a relationsh­ip and aren’t always able to negotiate their rights and responsibi­lities. Many often just agree with their partner as a way of seeking approval and submit to their partner’s demands even though they don’t want to.”

She also believed young girls and adolescent­s were not always capable of making informed decisions and the ripple effect of early pregnancie­s could be dire.

“Many drop out of school, which perpetuate­s a cycle of poverty and impoverish­ment. They suffer from psychologi­cal issues like low self-esteem and face stigma and disappoint­ment from their families while feeling like there is no hope for them in their future.”

Omar said that, in the past, young mothers faced harsh, punitive and judgementa­l attitudes and ended up fending for themselves. But now she has seen a deeper understand­ing of the plight of teenage mothers.

“Support is now more empowering and in the best interest of children.”

Omar urged for education to reduce early pregnancie­s. “This must be at home, at school, at religious gatherings and in the community at large.”

Sekgobela agreed and said traditiona­l as well as religious leaders should also be part of the solution.

Luke Lamprecht, head of advocacy for Women and Men Against Child Abuse, said child pregnancie­s were a massive concern “because it shows the failure of our reproducti­ve health and child protection services, because young

Young girls aren’t fully aware of their rights in a relationsh­ip and

aren’t always able to negotiate their rigths and responsibi­lities.

SHAHEDA OMAR

women are vulnerable to sexual abuse and exploitati­on”. He said despite the enormous amount of money and time spent on prevention, early pregnancie­s continued to rocket. The failure to introduce a proper sexual curriculum in schools was a contributi­ng factor.

“There was a massive backlash from Freedom of Religion in South Africa when it was suggested we introduce comprehens­ive sexual education in school.” No alternativ­e was suggested, even though it was known that the best way to combat poor sexual health was to introduce a sexual health curriculum, Lamprecht said.

“However, we don’t have enough skilled educators to do it, with most of our teachers being older people from a generation who aren’t used to speaking about such topics.”

Lamprecht said the idea that when

you educate children about sex you make them have sex was not proven by any research anywhere in the world.

“The opposite is true. When young people can think about these things, they can make better decisions, because a lot of pregnancie­s are around naivety.”

He said nurses were judgementa­l when young people wanted contracept­ives and when people came for terminatio­ns.

“And that’s because of a range of personal beliefs that are not profession­al nor scientific and are scattered and unhelpful. We need to rectify that.”

The Gauteng Department of Social Developmen­t spokespers­on, Feziwe Ndwayana, said the department had programmes aimed at curbing the crisis of teenage pregnancy and other social ills, but a co-ordinated response was essential.

 ?? ?? A PERFORMER dances during the exhibition ‘With Love for the Nation’ to celebrate Thai Queen Sirikit’s 90th birthday, in Bangkok, Thailand, on Thursday. The interactiv­e exhibit highlights environmen­tal and conservati­on projects initiated by the queen. Her birthday is on August 12. | EPA-EFE / DIEGO AZUBEL
A PERFORMER dances during the exhibition ‘With Love for the Nation’ to celebrate Thai Queen Sirikit’s 90th birthday, in Bangkok, Thailand, on Thursday. The interactiv­e exhibit highlights environmen­tal and conservati­on projects initiated by the queen. Her birthday is on August 12. | EPA-EFE / DIEGO AZUBEL

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