Tanzania pardons two child rapists and calls for arrest of pregnant schoolgirls
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Activists accused Tanzania’s leaders of “promoting a culture of human
rights violations”, as the release of two high-profile child rapists
this week coincided with calls for pregnant schoolgirls to be arrested.
John Magufuli, the Tanzanian president, pardoned the two men,
who were convicted of the rape of 10 primary school children aged
between six and eight, along with thousands of other prisoners, in his
independence day speech on Saturday.
News of their release emerged as a government official in the east
African country called for pregnant pupils to be taken into custody. On
Monday, John Mongella, the regional commissioner of Mwanza, said the
move would force girls to testify against those who impregnated them. This followed calls from the president earlier this year to ban pregnant girls from school.
The released rapists are singer Nguzu Viking, known as Babu Seya, and
his son, Johnson Ngazu, known as Papii Kocha, who were pardoned by the
president after serving 13 years of their sentence. They had been
convicted in 2003 of raping the children, pupils at Mashujaa primary
school in the Kinondoni district of Dar es Salaam.
Fazia Mohamed, the director of Equality Now’s Africa
office, said: “While President Mungafuli is pardoning convicted child
rapists, regional commissioner John Mongella is calling on pregnant
school girls to be arrested and taken to court. Tanzania’s leaders are
promoting a culture of human rights violations in which young victims of
sexual violence are being punished while perpetrators are going free.”
She said the policy of banning pregnant schoolgirls, often victims of
rape or sexual coercion, failed to address the issue of who impregnated
them.
“It is unacceptable that convicted child molesters walk free by order
of a president who simultaneously denies victims of assault access to
education if they become pregnant.
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“After
seeing their attackers sentenced to life for rape, now these survivors
and their families are dealing with the pain of witnessing the president
freeing the men who violated them. Where is the justice in that?” she
said.
Petrider Paul, of Youth for Change, in Tanzania, said the pardons sent a “terrible” message to perpetrators of sexual violence and devalued their victims.
“It is unfair to the victims of these crimes and it sends a bad
message to perpetrators that they can get away with it,” said Paul.
The release of the men caused outrage on social media, with many
posting the statements of the young girls who were violated, she said.
Children’s rights groups say this is just the latest example of the
president’s lack of understanding of violence against children.
Kate McAlpine, the director of Community for Children’s Rights in
Tanzania, told the BBC she was “horrified but unsurprised” by Magufuli’s
decision or the call to arrest pregnant schoolgirls.
“This story is indicative of a failure at the top level of political
will to end violence against children,” she said. “Pregnant schoolgirls
are pregnant because they are victims of violence. He has a blind spot
when it comes to recognising children as victims. There seems to be a
punitive attitude towards young children.”
She said the fact the two men were jailed in the first place was
unusual in a country where most rape cases are resolved within families.
A change.org petition calling for schoolgirls who are pregnant in Tanzania to be allowed to complete their education has attracted 66,000 signatures.
Magufuli, who came to power in November 2015, is a popular figure,
nicknamed the “the bulldozer” for his energetic road-building programme
as former works minister and for his solutions-based approach. His war
on corruption and wasteful spending has earned him admiration from many
quarters. However, he has come under fire recently for using repressive
legislation to silence the media, civil society and opposition groups.
In October, the Mwanahalisi newspaper became the second to be banned in Tanzania in a year, after publishing articles criticising the president.
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