• NIJEL WARNS ATHLETESNovember 5, 2025
    Speaks out on doping as Botswana grapples with rising cases NANCY RAMOKHUA & KITSO RAMONO RelatedPosts NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES Doubt over Bonno Housing scheme Questions over Zotus City   Botswana’s athletics fraternity is facing an unsettling trend as the… Read more: NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES
  • Doubt over Bonno Housing schemeNovember 4, 2025
    WUC owed P1.6 billion: Govt departments owe P728 million, households P680 million, businesses P170 million, and councils P90 million   GORATAONE KGOSIMORE RelatedPosts NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES Doubt over Bonno Housing scheme Questions over Zotus City editors@thepatriot.co.bw   Bonno Housing… Read more: Doubt over Bonno Housing scheme
  • Questions over Zotus CityNovember 4, 2025
    Only MOU signed, no funds committed KITSO RAMONO RelatedPosts NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES Doubt over Bonno Housing scheme Questions over Zotus City editors@thepatriot.co.bw   Botswana government has distanced itself from fully backing the multi-billion pulaZotus Smart City project, saying no… Read more: Questions over Zotus City
  • LIQUIDITY LOCKDOWNNovember 4, 2025
    Cash crunch sinks smallbusinesses KITSO RAMONO editors@thepatriot.com RelatedPosts NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES Doubt over Bonno Housing scheme Questions over Zotus City Botswana’s economy is running out of cash, and the signs are everywhere. From delayed supplier payments to frozen credit… Read more: LIQUIDITY LOCKDOWN
  • Reject US prisoners, Botswana advisedNovember 4, 2025
    “Bringing prisoners to serve their sentences here is inherently risky. Their upkeep is expensive. What happens if a prisoner dies? What is it in it for Botswana?” - expert   CALISTUS BOSALETSWE RelatedPosts NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES Doubt over Bonno… Read more: Reject US prisoners, Botswana advised
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders
  • Login
  • Register
Saturday, November 8, 2025
The Patriot On Sunday
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders
No Result
View All Result
Cart / $0.00

No products in the cart.

  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders
No Result
View All Result
The Patriot On Sunday
No Result
View All Result

WOMEN’S LIVES MATTER

patriot by patriot
February 8, 2021
in Lifestyle
0

The most pronounced silence against femicide and gender-based violence (GBV) is from men who should be allies of women in the cause against the outrage.   A local man once cut his lover’s ears and forced her to eat them. This was in 2019. In any likelihood of such violence, one would think this is the worst fate. But, the worst fate is death, at the hands of a man, like when a police officer holding the rank of Sergeant was arrested, suspected to have murdered his wife at Kuke village in Gantsi district this April. She was 51 years old.   A BIG GBV PROBLEM! It is more than likely to wake up to news of another woman murdered, raped or both. Each statistic weighs heavily on the heart but doesn’t come as a surprise any more. Each time a woman is murdered, her death takes the form of a headline and subject of public debate, usually for a day or two. It becomes a question of why she was killed rather than who killed her and the justice that should ensue. Then the cycle begins again when another death follows. An aggressive global health pandemic has not put a stop to the violence. In fact, it led to a spike in reported cases. In just three weeks into the lockdown, a total of 114 gender based violence cases were reported to Kagisano Society Women Shelter Project, which Lorato Moalusi of Botswana Gender-Based Violence Prevention and Support Centre described as a ‘sharp increase’.   Botswana Deputy Police Chief Dinah Marathe said investigations also revealed that the spiraling rape and defilement offences during the lockdown were committed by perpetrators who are family members of the victims.  

COVID ADDS EXTRA PAIN FOR BATSWANA WOMEN  

RelatedPosts

Pageantry: A peep behind the scenes

Letlotlo drops Lethabo

DISTINGUISHED CRAFTS LADY

With the detrimental effects of Covid-19 now, the vulnerability of women has heightened in the midst of job losses and pay cuts. In Botswana, over 67% of women have experienced some kind of abuse, which is over double the global average, as revealed by Gender Links Botswana. “Gender-based violence undermines the health, dignity, security and autonomy of its victims, yet it remains shrouded in a culture of silence and normalization,” the organisation has observed. This means the average Motswana woman experiences violent trauma once in their lifetime and that trauma is rarely confronted or reported. With the living reality of gender violence, which can happen anytime and anywhere, we have been in a crisis way before Covid-19 hit. World Population Review ranked Botswana second on ‘Top countries by Highest Rape Crime’. In 2016, the One Billion Rising campaign – a mass action campaign to end violence against women across the world – launched in Chobe and indicated that disturbingly in Botswana, two out of three women are more likely to experience GBV, which represents 67% of women. In our country, we have largely neglected women’s voices as central to their empowerment, which has led to most spaces that they occupy being shrouded by many unspoken truths in order to protect the integrity of the men around them. The failure to prosecute the Sebina incident that gave birth to the “I Shall Not Forget Movement” and the questionable delays in the ongoing defilement case of the Member of Parliament for Nata/Gweta and Polson Majaga provide little assurance that Botswana’s leadership is willing to deal with GBV.  

WE NEED TO FIX THIS!

So how can men be better allies to women? They must speak out. Not about how other men who commit such crimes are animals, but how they must play their part in dismantling the toxic masculinity that results in men killing. While the Botswana Police has introduced a toll-free number specifically for gender based issues, this has not helped to decrease the number of reported cases. According to the Pepfar Gender Analysis, there are no systems currently in place in Botswana to monitor compliance with existing gender policies and laws. In addition, inadequate human resource capacity to deliver comprehensive services including legal recourse, and insufficient funding to thoroughly address GBV are huge hurdles. These issues, combined with cultural norms and the economic dependence by women and children on men, make women and girls more vulnerable to GBV, especially in rural areas. Most cases of violence go unreported due to fear of further violence or being mocked by officials. In some instances, GBV cases have been dismissed due to lack of sufficient evidence, despite violence having taken place.  

BATSWANA WOMEN’S LIVES MATTER

The murder of African-American George Floyd has sparked the biggest global protests of our lifetime, and women are still hoping and waiting that one of their deaths will finally ignite a revolution that will stop femicide and the violence they fear will happen to them daily. The problem of violent patriarchy is urgent. Currently, #EveryThreeHours – a campaign spearheaded by Nature Inger – is asking all to stand in solidarity with victims as well as all women who fear for their lives daily. This time, our solidarity should translate into action.

Tags: GBVWomen
Previous Post

SADC to fight Islamic insurgents

Next Post

Insurance, lending boost NBFIRA

Related Posts

Pageantry: A peep behind the scenes
Lifestyle

Pageantry: A peep behind the scenes

October 27, 2025
Letlotlo drops Lethabo
Lifestyle

Letlotlo drops Lethabo

September 4, 2025
DISTINGUISHED CRAFTS LADY
Lifestyle

DISTINGUISHED CRAFTS LADY

August 18, 2025
Miss Eco Botswana 2025: Edith Segokgo’s Journey Towards Environmental Advocacy
Lifestyle

Miss Eco Botswana 2025: Edith Segokgo’s Journey Towards Environmental Advocacy

January 7, 2025
SoDeep Experience
Lifestyle

SoDeep Experience

November 28, 2024
Issues on Read amplifies youth voices
Lifestyle

Issues on Read amplifies youth voices

October 9, 2024
Next Post
Insurance, lending boost NBFIRA

Insurance, lending boost NBFIRA

Please login to join discussion
  • NIJEL WARNS ATHLETESNovember 5, 2025
    Speaks out on doping as Botswana grapples with rising cases NANCY RAMOKHUA & KITSO RAMONO RelatedPosts NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES Doubt over Bonno Housing scheme Questions over Zotus City   Botswana’s athletics fraternity is facing an unsettling trend as the… Read more: NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES
  • Doubt over Bonno Housing schemeNovember 4, 2025
    WUC owed P1.6 billion: Govt departments owe P728 million, households P680 million, businesses P170 million, and councils P90 million   GORATAONE KGOSIMORE RelatedPosts NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES Doubt over Bonno Housing scheme Questions over Zotus City editors@thepatriot.co.bw   Bonno Housing… Read more: Doubt over Bonno Housing scheme
  • Questions over Zotus CityNovember 4, 2025
    Only MOU signed, no funds committed KITSO RAMONO RelatedPosts NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES Doubt over Bonno Housing scheme Questions over Zotus City editors@thepatriot.co.bw   Botswana government has distanced itself from fully backing the multi-billion pulaZotus Smart City project, saying no… Read more: Questions over Zotus City
  • LIQUIDITY LOCKDOWNNovember 4, 2025
    Cash crunch sinks smallbusinesses KITSO RAMONO editors@thepatriot.com RelatedPosts NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES Doubt over Bonno Housing scheme Questions over Zotus City Botswana’s economy is running out of cash, and the signs are everywhere. From delayed supplier payments to frozen credit… Read more: LIQUIDITY LOCKDOWN
  • Reject US prisoners, Botswana advisedNovember 4, 2025
    “Bringing prisoners to serve their sentences here is inherently risky. Their upkeep is expensive. What happens if a prisoner dies? What is it in it for Botswana?” - expert   CALISTUS BOSALETSWE RelatedPosts NIJEL WARNS ATHLETES Doubt over Bonno… Read more: Reject US prisoners, Botswana advised
The Patriot On Sunday

© 2024 Copyright The Patriot On Sunday - Inspired by Search Mart.

Navigate Site

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Cart
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders

© 2024 Copyright The Patriot On Sunday - Inspired by Search Mart.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?