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By Kekeletso Nakeli

Columnist


We must act on GBV, as govt’s window dressing won’t help

Collectively we must watch out for our neighbours. If you know physical abuse happens behind a closed front door – shout out. You may just spare a life.


I once heard a tale that during one of the wars, the English were asked to paint their roofs black to confuse the airstrikes of the enemy at night.

Not one resident didn’t heed the call as they all knew a red roof made a perfect target. It was a collective effort to stay alive…

We need to heed that call with gender-based violence.

The advocate for women’s’ rights in me is asking about the safety as women in isolation. I’m asking because of the untold stories of abuse behind closed doors.

Today we wear black in solidarity with the lives lost to gender-based violence, the second pandemic faced by women globally. While paperwork is drawn up and legislation is punted in our face, women continue to die; they are raped – forever scarred by hands that may sanitize, but kill…

The government campaign is beautiful on paper, of no consequence in the halls of justice and in police stations – nothing more than window dressing.

This is the same justice system that grants R1 000 bail to men who viciously rape even toddlers for their sexual satisfaction. But just like clockwork, come November 25 every year – we must reject and report abusers: act and don’t look away, our government says…

The government speaks of challenging and denouncing cultural practices that perpetuate gender inequalities – the same government that on a daily basis is the mirror of gender inequality…

There must be more than the window dressing before we can show and tell.

When government officials are repeatedly accused of heinous acts of sexual harassment, the pot is calling the kettle black – and its at the expense of my gender.

We participate because we hope for change, the sparing of our lives; we participate because we hope our voices outlast the fanfare.

But we see the campaign as nothing more than a façade that, if executed better or taken more seriously, could bring more stories out the woodwork.

Lives could be spared…

So maybe it is up to us. Remember the black roofs?

Collectively we must watch out for our neighbours. If you see a red roof – one where you know physical abuse happens behind that closed front door – shout out. You may just spare a life.

Kekeletso Nakeli-Dhliwayo.

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