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‘Online platforms must be safe for women’

Womenย need to be capacitated on legal frameworks aroundย Online Gender Based Violenceย (OGBV)ย in order to protect themselves from digital harassment, various stakeholders have recommended.ย 

This came out during a conference hosted byย Emthonjeniย Womenโ€™s Forum, Friday, whose objectives wereย to raise awareness of OGBV and to strengthen the role of women as agents of change in the fight againstย the same.ย ย 

The conference was attended by various stakeholders inclusive of members of the Zimbabwe Republic Police,ย the Ministry of Women Affairs, members of CSOs, mediaย practitionersย andย universityย students among others.ย 

Variousย recommendations were made during the conference and most of them on theย need to raise awareness of OGBV andย sensitiseย various communities on the importance of understanding the lawย that speaks to such.ย 

Legal Practitioner, Prisca Dube, who spoke on the Data Protection Act and SADC Model laws on cyber security and effects of #OGBV on women and the reporting mechanisms, said there is an urgent need to test the provisions of this law to see if it adequately protects women, and also children and the youth. 

โ€œThis wouldย guide on the advocacy initiatives needed to make the law better and alive to women’s concerns and experiences as the online world keeps evolving.ย ย Testing theย provisions willย assist too in gauging if our law is in line and conforms to the Bill of Rights in the 2013 Constitution. All enabling Act must never violate the Supreme law of our land.โ€ย 

Thobekileย Matimbeย of Paradigm Initiativeย cited some of the manifestationsย of OGBV such asย misogynistic harassment and threats of other forms of violence, cyberbullying and cyber harassment among others.ย 

She said it is important to facilitate womenโ€™s access to digital technology domains in order to remove the digital gap and ensure gender diversity in the technological sector. 

โ€œThere is need to implement victim-friendly and gender-sensitive policies when handling cases of online violence against women. We need to repeal overly wide laws on surveillance as they contribute to the existing vulnerability of female journalists,โ€ Matimbe said. 

A participant said it is important to raise awarenessย fromย an early stage, by teaching youngย childrenย who have access to the internet and also university students who have become a target.ย 

โ€œWe must make use of relevant platforms so that people can have knowledge about the law pertaining to OGBV. Some ladies are victimised by lecturers in universities and they are afraid to speak out so it is important to raise awareness so that they may know the proper legal channels they can take to attain justice,โ€ the participant said. 

A representative from ZRP highlighted that law enforcers need to be capacitated on these laws and they need equipment that may enable them to enforce the law. 

โ€œYou may find that the police do not have enough equipment. A person may come to the police station to report a case of OGBV and the police officer does not have any gadget that may enable them to access the alleged offence. It is important that there be capacitation synergies that will help empower the police accordingly,โ€ the participant noted.ย 

A representative from the Ministry of Women Affairs said, โ€œMany a time, priority is given to physical forms of GBV but there is need to look into OGBV too. Stakeholders need to do ride-along activities in order to sensitiseย communitiesย on this form of violation.โ€ย ย 

A media practitionerย highlighted that journalists need to be capacitated on the law, and have it interpreted for them so that they can be able to write educative articles that will inform people of their rights when it comes to OGBV.

Tanaka Mrewa

Tanaka Mrewa is a journalist based in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. She is a seasoned multimedia journalist with eight years of experience in the media industry. Her expertise extends to crafting hard news, features, and investigative stories, with a primary focus on politics, elections, human rights, climate change, gender issues, service delivery, corruption, and health. In addition to her writing skills, she is proficient in video filming and editing, enabling her to create documentaries. Tanaka is also involved in fact-check story production and podcasting.

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