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BURUNDI: FOCUS ON RAPE
January 15, 2004 (IRIN Analysis) At 24, a
single mother, Marie - not her real name - could have expected a
better deal in life. But she was given no choice: while working
as a housemaid in Kinindo, a residential suburb of the capital,
Bujumbura, Marie was raped and subsequently found herself pregnant.
Like many other girls who get pregnant in Burundi, including those
who do as a consequence of being raped, Marie would not have even
dreamed of seeking an abortion, not least because abortion is prohibited
here.
Risk of STDs
However, her plight could have been even worse, in that she was
lucky not to have been infected with HIV or some other sexually
transmitted disease (STD). In a recent presentation on medical care
for rape victims Dr Trihonie Ndikumana, a gynaecologist at Bujumbura's
University Hospital, said that in cases of rape, the risks for victims
of contracting an STD were very high: 30 percent for hepatitis B,
3 percent for hepatitis C and 0.3 percent for HIV/AIDS.
However, if such women obtain medical treatment early enough after
the event, protective measures against HIV can be successful.
"We can give them anti-retroviral treatment to block the transmission
of the virus in the blood, but for that, victims must consult four
hours after the rape, or 72 hours to the maximum," Ndikumana
said.
Moreover, victims could also avert pregnancy by receiving emergency
contraceptive pills.
Many rapes unreported
However, in spite of the availability of these prophylactic measures,
many cases of rape go unreported. Lucie Nyamarushwa, a human rights
coordinator with the Iteka rights group, attributes this to victims'
ignorance of their rights and the procedures available to prosecute
perpetrators.
However, for Dieudonné Nsanzamahoro, the psychologist in
charge of the Fight Against Rape project being administered by Nturengaho,
an NGO specialising in the care of rape victims, the reasons are
more complex.
"Victims hide the crime in shame, because it has not only psychological
implications for the victim herself but also social consequences.
Society has such a bad conception of rape that it puts the blame
on the victim and not the perpetrator," he told IRIN.
Instead of receiving the sympathy and help that their misfortune
cries out for, victims are usually accused of having tempted the
perpetrators, and therefore deserve their fate. "For fear of
being termed of having loose morals, many prefer to hide away what
they consider their shame," Nsanzamahoro said.
Regardless of the consequences of the rape for the victim, Marie's
parents generally tended to advise her to keep the matter to herself
and, particularly in the event of her being young, they feared that
if it became known no man would ever marry her, he added.
Moreover, this misconception was damaging to the victim's fragile
equilibrium, instilling in her a misplaced sense of guilt. Not only
that, but, depending on her personality, a woman who had been raped
might lose her self-esteem, appetite, or sexual drive, and even
attempt suicide.
However, with psychological assistance, victims could be helped
to regain their self-confidence and express their anger against
the perpetrators instead of turning in on themselves, Nsanzamahoro
said.
Social attitudes a problem
But social attitudes remained a serious problem in this context,
he said: girls who had been raped were chased out of their schools,
stigmatised by their peers, and those found pregnant were then rejected
by their families. Nsanzamahoro also cited the case of a man in
the eastern province of Ruyigi who divorced his wife after she was
raped.
He also cited a case to illustrate the difficulties encountered
by rape victims in seeking justice.
"At Kabezi in Rural Bujumbura, a raped woman reported the crime
to the local elders, this being a necessary preliminary to instituting
legal proceedings. The elders told her to keep quiet, because such
things could not be discussed in public. She was so ashamed that
she came to us, but that was three weeks after the event, so past
the deadline for successful prophylactic treatment," Nsanzamahoro
said.
According to Marjorie Niyungeko, the chairwoman of the Burundi Women
Lawyers' Association, Burundian society regards anything related
to sex as taboo. This attitude served to discourage rape victims
from taking legal proceedings to such a degree that by the time
they finally decided to go ahead it was usually too late to obtain
the relevant evidence, she told IRIN.
Difficulty in obtaining justice
Burundi law, on the other hand, does contain provisions to protect
victims.
"The law punishes a man guilty of attempted rape with between
six months and five years of imprisonment. In the event of the victim
being under 18 years old, the sentence can be as long as 20 years,
if the perpetrator resort to threat " Niyungeko said.
"However, judges, like the rest of society, do not regard rape
as a serious crime to be severely punished, and therefore tend to
treat offenders leniently. This has the effect of discouraging victims
from taking legal proceedings, knowing they are unlikely to succeed,"
she added.
Niyungeko therefore believes that there is a need for a nationwide
campaign to instil into society the serious nature of the crime
of rape. For his part, Nsanzamahoro is calling for a national crusade
against rape.
Rape on the increase
The crime, meanwhile, is on the increase in Burundi. Figures made
available by Nturengaho singled out the provinces of Muramvya, Ruyigi
and Bujumbura as the most affected, with 91 cases registered in
Ruyigi from April to November 2003, 60 cases in Muramvya from June
to November, and 86 cases in Bujumbura from January to August 2003.
Nsanzamahoro attributed the rise in the number of cases to the civil
war. "Men always want to dominate, but in times of war, they
accumulate different frustrations. They therefore rape not to satisfy
their sexual needs but as a means of expressing their frustrations,"
he said.
Another contributory factor to the rise, he added, was the strong
but wrong belief that having sexual intercourse with very young
girls could cure HIV-positive men.
"This may explain why the majority of rape victims are children
under 18, even in one case involving a two-year-old girl."
Inquiries made by Nturengaho and Iteka found that government soldiers
and rebel combatants were responsible for most of the cases.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200401150003.html
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