Photo: Otto Bakano/IRIN. Downtown Freetown. Sexual violence is prevalent in Sierra Leone
Source: IRIN
FREETOWN, 6 November 2013 (IRIN) - The ongoing trial of Sierra Leone’s
former Deputy Education Minister Mahmoud Tarawally on rape charges has
made headlines and highlighted the prevalence of sexual violence in the
country. More than 6,500 incidents of domestic- and gender-based
violence were reported in Sierra Leone in the first eight months of
2013, almost as many as in the whole of 2012.
Authorities say the upward trend is likely due to more people deciding
to report cases of sexual abuse. Tarawally, who has since been sacked,
was charged after a report was filed by the alleged victim, a
24-year-old university student. Although it is unclear how many cases go
unreported, many in Sierra Leone agree that the country faces a serious
problem with gender-based violence.
Charles Vandi, director of gender affairs at the Ministry of Social
Welfare, said the high level of sexual violence has its roots in Sierra
Leone’s decade-long civil war. “Women and girls were used as sex
slaves,” he told IRIN. “They were tortured, they were abused.
“The social structures broke down during the civil war - the respect for
human life, the respect for rule of law... We thought that the end of
the war was going to arrest some of those negative social vices, but
actually it’s continuing,” he explained.
Barriers to justice
Impunity
surrounding gender-based crimes is a major contributing factor. Of the
6,591 reported cases of domestic or gender-based violence so far this
year, a mere six percent resulted in a conviction, according to police
statistics.
Vandi pointed to difficulty enforcing the sexual offences law enacted in
2012 and the domestic violence legislation passed earlier. The Family
Support Unit (FSU), a police body tasked with investigating sexual
crimes, is poorly funded and inadequately staffed. It is also undermined
by frequent staff rotation; no sooner do officers get training to deal
with gender-related violence than they are posted to other divisions.
Superintendent Mabel Fallah, the FSU chief, also decried a lack of
cooperation by victims and witnesses. Many people cannot afford to pay
for the frequent transport required to pursue legal proceedings, and so
they skip court cases - which may be adjourned anyway, as lawyers,
victims, witnesses and judges are not always available, Fallah said.
“Sometimes people have to travel 25 miles to get to the nearest
courthouse, the nearest FSU,” said Ibrahim Tommy of the Centre for
Accountability and the Rule of Law. “And it costs money. At least
US$2-3, and that is a fortune for many families in rural communities.”
Sierra Leone’s court system
is hugely overstretched. Some provinces do not even have a resident
magistrate. There are too few lawyers, as well, particularly in the
rural provinces. As a result, according to Vandi, victims are
occasionally represented in court by policemen who have no legal
training.
Faced with the option of pursuing lengthy and expensive court cases,
many victims prefer to strike a deal with the accused, said Tommy.
Stigma
He also explained that cultural issues compound the problem,
particularly in rural areas where traditional patriarchal power
structures remain strong. Close-knit extended family groups and local
chiefs frequently dissuade victims from pursuing justice, preferring
instead to settle the matter within the community.
The few women who do come forward may face open hostility in court and
are stigmatized afterwards. Tarawally’s case highlights why many victims
of sexual violence prefer to remain silent.
“In the premises of the chief justice of Sierra Leone, we had an alleged
rape victim testify in the full view of the public. Invectives were
hurled at her. Her mother, who was in the courtroom, was booed,” said
Tommy, recounting Tarawally’s trial. “At one point, she sat with her
head buried in her hands for a long period. That is not going to
encourage anyone to come forward and cooperate.”
The witness and victim protection clauses under the Sexual Offences Act
have yet to be implemented. The student allegedly raped by Deputy
Minister Tarawally reportedly gave evidence in open court and was later
forced to seek shelter with an NGO. And despite the legislation banning
the media from naming victims of gender-based violence, several prominent newspapers identified her.
Progress
In 2011, the government, with the support of the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP), launched a new initiative to address some
of the obstacles to accountability. Some courts now extend their working
week to include Saturdays, when they hear only gender-related cases.
The aim of the Saturday sessions is to clear a backlog of around 700
such cases.
Additionally, the police are better trained in the standard operating
procedures for dealing with gender-based crimes: sexual and gender-based
violence issues are now part of the training for all police recruits.
Community-based organizations are being supported in their efforts to
encourage victims to seek justice through the courts.
Rakel Larsen, a legal officer at UNDP, said the initiatives have led to
more people reporting cases, better FSU's investigations and more
convictions. Of the Saturday court cases that are referred to the high
court, 70 percent now end in convictions, Larsen said.
While still low, the 399 people convicted for sexual and domestic crimes
in Sierra Leone during the first eight months of this year is an
improvement over 2012, when just 152 people were found guilty. There is
no quick-fix for changing deeply engrained attitude towards women and
sexual violence, but progress is being made.