Two more pregnant women raped in hospital
Crime & Courts Health & Fitness Zimbabwe

Two more pregnant women raped in hospital

Province de Masvingo, district de Chivi, Berejena, clinique, maternité. Une femme se repose quelques minutes après son accouchement. Masvingo province, Chivi district, Berejena, clinic, maternity ward. A woman rests a few minutes after delivery. From 2006 to beginning of 2010, the ICRC has assisted 11 rural clinics in two districts of southern Zimbabwe: 6 in Chivi district and 5 in Tsholotsho district, in Matebeleland North. The assistance consisted mainly in distribution of essential drugs, medical material, stationery and furniture. The Water and Habitat department also participated to the assitance: rehabilitation of water networks, building of a waste management area with an incinerator, an organic pit and an ashes pit. When it was decided to finish the assistance in the first months of 2010, the ICRC rehabilitated the existing shelters for pregnant women to safely wait for delivery in the last days of their pregnancy on the premises of the clinic, where nurses are available in case of complications. A number of women in the region tend to deliver home, or to go to the clinic at the last minutes, which results in regular (althought not frequent) incidents and complications. Such shelters in the clinic premises allow to reduce the risks of complications for mothers delivering. They provide a safer environment for pregnant women, which prompted the ICRC to invest in their rehabilitation: repairs of cracked walls, windows and doors, painting, repair/change of roofs. Those shelters were mostly built in the 1960’s and were in a very battered state when ICRC decided to rehabilitate them. The rehabilitation works were completed by end of June 2010. In the clinics of Razi and Berejena, in Chivi district around 800 women deliver each year (300 in Razi, 500 in Berejena). Around 65 per cent of pregnant women use the shelters. Razo shelter hosts around 4 women each week, while around 6 per week use the Berejena shelter.

TWO more pregnant women were yesterday morning raped at Maphisa District Hospital in Matobo District, Matabeleland South Province by yet to be identified alleged criminals who broke into the maternity waiting home.

The incident comes barely four months after a similar incident took place at the same hospital, with the criminals using the same modus operandi. Matabeleland South police provincial spokesperson Inspector Loveness Mangena, while confirming receiving the report said police officers were still conducting their investigations to determine what transpired.

“So far details are a bit sketchy as our investigating officers are still on the ground conducting the necessary investigations,” said Insp Mangena.

Sources at the hospital revealed that they suspected that the same people who had attacked the hospital in July were the ones who had carried out the latest criminal act, judging from the manner in which the rape incidents were done.

“The manner in which these criminals broke into the hospital is the same way those people broke into the hospital last time. This took place in the early hours of Saturday morning. We suspect that this is a syndicate that is taking advantage of the relaxed security at the hospital.

“What worries us as employees is that despite this happening in July there has been no movement in terms of upping security at the hospital,” said the source.

In July, the suspects allegedly used the window to sneak into the maternity home where three pregnant women were sleeping. The victims had only locked the doors and left the windows open. The fourth woman who was in the room managed to escape unharmed. Pregnant women who are close to their due dates camp at the hospital so as to get attention immediately because of long distances they have to travel from their homes to the hospital.

Matabeleland South provincial medical director Dr Rudo Chikodzore, said cases of women being raped at hospital maternity homes have been escalating during the past few months with cases of Gender Based Violence (GBV) also escalating at growth points.

“The raping of women has been an issue at the growth point and around the district so there has been a multi-sectoral response to GBV and sexual assault involving the police and all stakeholders in the Rural District Council.

Police are doing patrols around the growth point. We have also educated the community to avoid travelling at night to avoid being mugged or raped,” she said.

The incident happened as the country has joined the world in the 16 Days of Activism against Gender Based Violence that started on Thursday.-Sundaynews

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