Swaziland: Every third woman
sexually abused as a child, says report
Published in HIV/AIDS News by LearnScapes, issue 296
09/04/2008
Mbabane – One in three Swazi women has suffered some
form of sexual abuse as a child; one in four experienced
physical violence, a new United Nations survey revealed
this week.
The study by the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) is the first
of its kind conducted in a country where anecdotal evidence
suggests an alarming number of female children are victims
of abuse. More disconcertingly still, the mushrooming population
of orphans and vulnerable children in Swaziland provide
yet more opportunities for sexual exploitation to occur.
In two years, 200,000 Swazi children will have been orphaned
by AIDS - more than one-fifth of the current population,
according to UNICEF. With HIV prevalence at 33.4 percent
among people aged between 15 and 49, the country has the
world's highest infection rate. As a result, life expectancy
has halved from nearly 60 years in the 1990s to just over
30 years today.
"Disabled children, children out of school and orphans
are some of the most vulnerable groups," said Jama
Gulaid, UNICEF representative in Swaziland. "Poverty
and the high prevalence of HIV create high numbers of marginalised
children."
The survey, the National Study on Violence Against Children
and Young Women, based its findings on interviews among
rural and urban communities. Disturbingly, it concluded
that violence and sexual assault against girls primarily
took place at home. "We found that 75 percent of the
perpetrators of sexual violence were known to the victim,"
Gulaid said. "It is not surprising that sexual abuse
of girls is a household problem, because Swazis reside in
multi-generational homes,
usually isolated farms," said a researcher with the
non-governmental organisation, Women in Law in Southern
Africa's Swaziland chapter. "Relatively few girls are
raped by strangers in towns because less of the population
resides in towns, and there is a heightened awareness of
security there".
Rapists don't use condoms
Often the abusers are the girls' own fathers and boyfriends.
Only 43.5 percent of girls said their first sexual experiences
were freely willed and devoid of coercion: a little less
than five percent said they had been introduced to sex as
rape victims. Underscoring the urgency of addressing violence
against girls was the AIDS crisis.
"Rapists don't use condoms, and if a father or uncle
are so inclined to rape a daughter or niece, or a boyfriend
forces himself on his girlfriend, the danger of HIV transmission
is rife," said Victor Ndlovu, a voluntary testing and
counselling officer in the central commercial town of Manzini.
"Add to that the reluctance of girls to report abuse
or in many instances to rightly understand they have been
violated, we are faced with a serious public health challenge,
aside from the individual suffering incurred by the girls."
A third of Swazi females interviewed for the study reported
they had experienced emotional abuse. Often, the perpetrators
had been abused themselves as children. "The established
'hand me down' passing on of abuse is evident from what
we were told," said Pamela Dlamini, a sociology student
at the University of Swaziland, who was one of the survey
interviewers. "Emotional abuse of girls is
mostly carried out by the girls' female relatives, who were
abused themselves. Sometimes there is jealousy. Instead
of reporting an abusive husband or unable to police [the
girl], the girl's mother or aunt will treat the girl as
a rival. This comes from a culture where any post-pubescent
girl is considered eligible for marriage in a polygamous
household, even if she is 13, although Swazi culture does
not allow for the incest we find rampant in households where
abuse occurs."
Although officially a middle-income country, the UN Development
Programme estimates more than two-thirds of Swazis live
in chronic poverty, about the same number - over 600,000
- currently depend on food assistance from the World Food
Programme and other donor groups. The report noted that
"Violence can damage the emotional, cognitive and physical
development of children and thereby impact economic development
of Swaziland by degrading the contribution of affected children".
The way forward
Less than half of sexual assaults and other abusive crimes
are reported to the authorities. Swazi children were found
to have sought help from the police or social welfare counselors
in only one out of five cases that resulted in injury serious
enough to consult a doctor. The way forward appears to be
through education, instructing girls about what constitutes
abuse. "I spoke with many girls who said they did not
understand that they had been abused. They felt abused,
physically and psychologically, but no one told them this
was not normal," said Dlamini.
The report backed Dlamini's observation, noting, "The
numbers suggest a lack of understanding of what sexual violence
is and how and where to report such incidents". Educational
programmes in schools would assist in a country where primary
school attendance is relatively widespread, and instruct
girls on the type of behaviour acceptable when they return
home. "The large numbers of sexual violence incidents
happening in the home underscores the hidden nature of sexual
violence
and presents one of the largest challenges in preventing
sexual violence in Swaziland," the report said.
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