Advocate makes alarming claims about victims of child rape admitted to Care Centers
Advocate makes alarming claims about victims of child rape admitted to Care Centers
About 60 to 65 % of people treated at the Thuthuzela Care Centers are children who are raped in their family homes in South Africa, says advocate Tarisai Mchuchu-MacMillan, executive director of the Mosaic women’s training service and healing centre.
Adv. Mchuchu-MacMillan spoke at a women-in-dialogue-event, hosted by the women-led organization 1000 Women Trust, a pioneer in the field of creating awareness of gender-based violence, at the Artscape Theatre in Cape Town during the weekend.
More than 250 women attended the glittering event and were welcomed by Marlene le Roux, CEO of the Artscape Theatre.
Tina Thiart, co-founder of 1000 Women Trust, said these alarming revelations form part of a bigger picture pf 113 women that are raped every day. According to a recent study conducted by the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) an estimated total of 1 338 336 women were abused roughly between January and December of 2021 and 432 525 women were sexually abused.
When one pay tribute to the more than 20000 women who marched to the Union Buildings on 9th August 1956 in protest against the extension of pass laws to women, one must also pay tribute to the more than 950 SA women that are murdered in each quarter of the year, she said.
Thiart also referred to the statistics that underline the gender inequality that still exist in South Africa. “One in five girls get married before they get to the age of 16 and one in four girls do not enroll at secondary school,” she said.
“In South Africa, women, on average earn 30 % less than men, and of the 50000 sexual offences that are reported annually, most go unpunished,” Thiart added.
“Girls in rural areas are twice as likely to drop out of school than in metropolitan areas,” Thiart said.
Thiart emphasized the commitment by 1000 Women Trust of providing resources to 52 safe houses in South Africa over the next few months in support of warriors in GBV-hotspots across the country to assist survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault.
These safe houses fill the void in the period between an attack in the evening and the next day when these warriors will escort the women to the police stations, Thuthuzela Care Centres or the courts to lay charges.
Felicity An Guest, a child maintenance expert who suffered economic abuse at the hands of her ex-husband, warned at the event that a dysfunctional child maintenance court and system is often weaponized to punish the ex-wives in South Africa.
She said 60 % of women in South Africa who are divorced, get zero child support due to a dysfunctional child support system. “Ultimately, these courts can become a form of oppression and make these women more vulnerable to more abuse by their ex-husbands,” she warned
Lynn Hill, a globally recognized motivational speaker who overcame rape, said in a poem at the women-in-dialogue-event: “Pain became my second name and my gateway to victory. My roar is to live a purposeful life. Self-love amplifies my presence in the world.”
Leonie Viljoen, a gender activist who ascended Kilimanjaro at the end of June to create awareness of GBV and femicide, said she raised more than R20000 through her efforts for 1000 Women Trust. “The climb underlined the fact that ordinary women can still do extraordinary things,” she said.
For more information about 1000 Women Trust, contact the Trust on info@1000women.co.za or phone on 061 469 0479.









