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South Africa shocked as six charged with
raping baby girl |
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The Independent
Alex Duvall Smith
November 13, 2001
Six men from an impoverished South
African township will appear in court charged with raping a
nine-month-old girl in a case that has shocked the violence-prone
country. She was assaulted in a two-room brick house on Sultana Road
– thus named because if you live in this Northern Cape settlement on
the edge of the Kalahari desert, your fate is to work either at the
dried-fruit factory or in a nearby vineyard.
Six men from an impoverished South African
township will appear in court charged with raping a nine-month-old
girl in a case that has shocked the violence-prone country. She was
assaulted in a two-room brick house on Sultana Road – thus named
because if you live in this Northern Cape settlement on the edge of
the Kalahari desert, your fate is to work either at the dried-fruit
factory or in a nearby vineyard.
The apartheid regime planned it that way,
removing people three times in one generation and finally, in the
1970s, dumping them on this windswept scrubland for mixed-race
people.
In those days, there were jobs. "Today, I would
put the population at about 10,000 and unemployment at 60 per
cent,'' said the Rev Johannes Stuurman, to whom the rape was
reported because no one in Louisvaleweg trusts the police. "The
community came to me because they felt I might be able to ensure
that the police do their job.''
The police in nearby Upington are holding six
mixed-race men, aged 24 to 66, whom they charged with rape on
finding them in the Sultana Road house after the incident, said to
have taken place on a Friday night when they were drunk.
Officers say only DNA tests will reveal whether
Baby Tshepang, as she has been nicknamed, was raped by all, some or
maybe just one of the men. In custody, the accused are blaming each
other.
The baby is in hospital five hours' drive away,
in Kimberley, where she is being given anti-retroviral drugs to try
to reduce the chances of HIV infection, and has been operated on to
repair her injuries.
South Africa is in shock, there is talk of
castration and life sentences, and the media is publishing stories
of similar incidents. In the 18 months after January 2000, almost
32,000 reports of sexual assault on children were made.
In the same week as Baby Tshepang's rape, a
17-year-old boy was arrested for the rape of a four-year-old;
another teenager appeared in court in connection with the rape of a
three-year-old; a four-year-old girl died after allegedly being
raped by her father; and two men were arrested for allegedly raping
their 14-month niece. It is understood that many girls are raped
because ofa belief that sex with a virgin cures HIV infection; 20
per cent of all South Africans have the Aids virus.
The brutality of life in Louisvaleweg stares Mr
Stuurman, aged 37, in the face. The United Congregational Church
priest has lived here for four years and says he was not surprised
by the baby's rape.
"On a weekly basis, I hear of rapes. Often,
when it is the white farmers doing it, they pay the victim 150 rands
(£12) to withdraw the charge. Three weeks before the baby was raped,
her 68-year-old grandmother was raped,'' he said.
It was the grandmother – in common with other
relatives, she cannot be named for legal reasons – who raised the
alarm after finding the child, covered in blood, not wearing a nappy
and crying uncontrollably on that Friday night. She ran down Sultana
Road to a payphone, called an ambulance and sent a neighbour to
alert Mr Stuurman, four blocks away.
Police say the baby's mother had left it "in
the care of someone'' while she went to buy food. The carer, a woman
married to one of the accused, says she was sleeping in the next
room with her 10-month-old girl, and heard nothing.
Neighbours say the baby's mother, who is aged
16, spent the evening drinking at a local shebeen. The father, who
is 21 and has a four-year-old boy by another woman, says he was in
his own home.
The six men in custody – all but two of whom
are unemployed – include the baby's grandfather but also, the police
admit, other relatives.
Life here is bleak. You find 15 people living
in these two-room houses; 11 people lived in the same house as the
baby. The wine farms are retrenching their workforces and people
with jobs are mostly employed only seasonally.
They are paid as little as 50 rands a week,
plus alcohol. The "dop" system is used, so measures of alcohol are
part of men's wages. That tends to mean domestic violence is part of
people's lives.
"For some young men, rape is a badge that
proves manhood. Poverty, of course, plays a role,'' says Mr Stuurman,
who has started a library in his Emmanuel Church and allows pupils
to use his house for their exam preparations.
Others say that sex for money or alcohol is so
common as to seem the same as any commodity that can be bought or
sold. Many first pregnancies occur at 13 or 14 and a majority of
first sexual experiences are of rape.
Johan van Wyk, a jobless resident, said: "Often
you just have to give a woman some alcohol and they will do
anything. At least they [the rapists] could have taken a woman. Why
a child? The baby was so young and could do nothing.''
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