Catherine Mazorodze was overworked and tired when she quit
her job as a farmworker in Zimbabwe’s Manicaland province.
No job meant she was also homeless, along with her
grandmother with whom she had shared a small home provided by the farm’s
owners. Mazorodze jumped at the opportunity to get a small plot of land of her
own — distributed by the leaders of Chisumbanje, her village — but soon
realised there was a price to pay.
“The traditional leader of the area told me I was young and
not entitled to allocated land, since it was meant to benefit the elderly,” she
told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview.
“He blatantly said if I wanted a piece of land ... I had to
have sex with him. Out of desperation and poverty, I agreed to his terms,” the
37-year-old said. Land is unevenly distributed in Zimbabwe and women,
particularly in rural areas, are largely treated as dependants of men, not as
landholders or farmers in their own right, according to the U.N. Food and
Agricultural Organization.
Mazorodze said she was not the only one to be forced to
offer sex for land out of desperation, adding that most women she knows are too
embarrassed to speak out about their experiences.
She is a victim of sextortion, a growing form of corruption
that forces women to offer sexual services in exchange for land, employment or
job opportunities, according to Transparency International Zimbabwe (TIZ), an
anti-corruption charity.
Sextortion is a global phenomenon that causes serious harm,
robbing women of dignity and opportunity and undermining confidence in public
institutions, rights groups say. But legally it often falls between the cracks
and does not get prosecuted as either a sexual crime or corruption, said
Marilyn Sibanda, a legal officer at TIZ.
“The moment you consent, the criminal element falls out,”
she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “Of course, institutions or companies
might have policies in places for people to report sexual offences. But
villagers in secluded rural parts of the country don’t have measures to curb
this form of corruption,” she added.
Her organisation’s research shows sextortion is becoming
more common in Zimbabwe, she said, although there are no statistics available
at a national level. John Makamure, a commissioner in the Zimbabwe
Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC) said the organisation was ready to
investigate such cases.
“It is crucial for people to bring forward evidence on this
corruption, then ZACC can investigate. ZACC cannot just start investigations
based on sentiments alone,” he said.
At 160th place, Zimbabwe ranks towards the bottom of
Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index, a tool which ranks
180 countries by their perceived levels of public sector corruption.
Studies carried out by TIZ throughout Zimbabwe in 2016
showed women are vulnerable to sexual abuse when they try to access land for
both residential, business and agricultural use.
“TIZ has conducted
mobile legal clinics in rural areas...where we asked women if they knew about
‘sextortion’. The women concurred they know about the abuse and some confirmed
they were victims of this corruption,” Sibanda said.
Researchers also found evidence of sextortion in Zimbabwe’s
southwestern Matabeleland South province, where women said they were asked for
sex in exchange for gold mining rights.
“We realise that in mining, it is difficult for women to
own a gold mining claim,” said Scha Ndlovu, director for Community Youth
Development Trust, a charity working with rural communities in the provice.
“Women are then forced to sleep with Mr So and So to gain mining rights in
order fend for their families.”
Sextortion is not confined to rural areas, said Farai Mutondoro,
head of programmes at TIZ.
“In urban localities, we gathered information that as a
result of demolitions of illegal settlements and displacement, woman bear the
brunt of ‘sextortion’ as they need places to stay,” he said. Mutondoro added
that TIZ recorded cases of land corruption in the southwestern city of Bulawayo
where women were excluded from a housing scheme and replaced with male
candidates.
“Data show widows are losing out on estates because
relatives bribe officials at the deeds office and put a different name (on the
deed),” he said.
TIZ also recorded cases of women who confirmed they were
exploited sexually in exchange for vending spaces in the city. Malandu Ncube, a
councilor at Bulawayo City Council, said the authority was aware of the problem
and urged victims to come forward.
“Sometimes this occurs because there are women who prefer
to cut corners, then fall victim to such exploitation. However, women must
speak out about against such exploitation,” he said. But deep-rooted cultural
beliefs and blaming women rather than men for sextortion might make it hard to
root out the problem, said Reginald Shoko, chair of the Affirmative Action
Group, a non-profit association.
Shoko said some would doubt “sextortion” was real as sex is
seen as a normal exchange between adults. “It feeds into the perception that
when most women make it to leadership positions, they would have offered sexual
favours,” said Shoko.
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