sponsored by
Sponsored by ClearKitchen.com -- new products for cooking and entertaining.
Spero News
crimecrime

Cameroon: Cases of rape increase

Article Tools

A recent survey carried out in ten regions of Cameroon shows that rape cases are on the rise.

According to IPS, 20 percent of the nearly 38,000 women interviewed reported having been raped.

The German Technical Cooperation (GTZ) and Cameroon's National Association of Aunties – (RENATA), an organization of more than 10,000 teenaged mothers working against sexual violence, found most rapes were committed by people known to the victims.

“The rapists are family members, including fathers, school teachers, pastors and priests, classmates, colleagues, friends and neighbours," Dr Flavien Tiokou Ndonko, one of the researchers, told IPS.

Family members were reported to be the assailants in 18 percent of cases. Nearly a quarter of those raped became pregnant as a result.

“These statistics cannot in any way show the full extent of rape in the country, because most victims never tell anyone they have been raped,” said Ndonko.

A separate study jointly carried out by the GTZ and RENATA, entitled Constraints in Seeking Justice for Rape Victims in Cameroon, revealed that of the 33 reported cases between 2004 and 2007 at the Bamenda High Court, in Cameroon's North West region, "only two of them were sentenced, 22 were struck out as lacking evidence, eight cases were discharged on grounds of simple threats, while one was withdrawn.”

The report further indicates that the procedures for getting legal redress are too cumbersome and take too long, essentially because of "the need for preliminary investigations, from the police and/or hospital to the legal department, before getting to court.”

In the course of these lengthy procedures, the report says, "most victims encounter lots of interventions and negotiations whereby the case is stopped or withdrawn before justice is rendered."

Constraints such as a lack of counseling for survivors and accused, lack of specialized judges for rape cases, the high cost of court action and administration, as well as threats from the accused, all combine to make justice for rape survivors a privilege, not a right in Cameroon.

According to Patience Siri Akenji, the legal consultant who supervised the study, what happens in the Bamenda High Court is a microcosm of what happens in courts across the country.

She suggests the legal system be improved to make deadlines applicable to judicial officers to prosecute, specific laws should also be enacted to protect rape victims and also also recommends that court sessions be held in the magistrates' chambers for the protection of rape survivors, away from the pressure of the court room, and as a way to uphold the dignity of the victim.

"This will encourage the reporting of these cases, and encourage cooperation, leading to rapid intervention in rape cases," Akenji said.

Despite Cameroon’s penal code that states, "Whoever by force or moral ascendancy compels any female, whether above or below the age of puberty, to have sexual intercourse with him shall be punished with imprisonment from five to 10 years,” few perpetrators of rape are ever prosecuted in Cameroon.

Source: CISA

Africa RSS
Comments

Popular Right Now

New World News

Your E-mail Address:

Privacy Statement
 


© Copyright Spero, All rights reserved. RSS
Twitter
Facebook
Google+
Submit a tip
Advertise
Terms of use
Privacy Policy
Contact
This page took 0.3633seconds to load