Speaking up against sexual violence, domestic abuse in Ethiopia

Share

Laws have changed and crimes are increasingly reported but survivors, activists and politicians say stigma remains.

 

Twin sisters Dagim and Yeabsera were young children when their uncle first sexually assaulted them.

 

The abuse continued for years, as their father was absent – he left when they were born, and their mother worked as a domestic helper in a Middle Eastern country.

 

“Our uncle used to take turns to rape us, especially at middle of the night, when he was usually either drunk or high from taking drugs,” said Yeabsera.

 

They had been living with their uncle and maternal grandmother, who they say also physically abused them and failed to acknowledged her son’s devastating actions.

 

When the uncle was imprisoned for two years for shoplifting, his friends took turns abusing the children.

 

Dagim developed a heart problem, caused by stress. A school teacher referred her to a hospital for treatment where, finally, the twins’ trauma was revealed.

 

They are now 15 and, for the past two months, have been living in a refuge in Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, run by the Association for Women’s Sanctuary and Development (Awsad),  the only local NGO offering shelter and rehabilitation to women and girls.

 

“We used to think we had no mother and father,” said Yeabsera, “but the care given by Awsad staff has got us feeling we have a real family.”

In socially conservative Ethiopia, the sexual assault of children, who make up around half of the population, is largely a taboo subject.

 

Chaltu, 15, worked as a domestic helper and was abused by her employer.

 

“Me and my sister used to get taunted in school by classmates because of our poverty, so I dropped out and got employed as a domestic maid in a stranger’s home,” she said.

 

The abuse started more than two years ago, with the home owner scaring her into silence by threatening to kill her family if she talked about it.

 

“The sexual abuse I endured was only revealed after my closest classmate persuaded me about two months ago to tell my teacher about the rape,” she said.

 

Awsad also provides shelter to survivors of domestic violence.

 

Meseret Wosenyeleh needed a safe space after her abusive husband’s family blamed her for his suicide.

 

Pregnant with her third child, the mother of eight-month-old twins said: “My husband’s family are threatening me with violence, accusing me of having a hand in his own suicide.”

 

Lensi Kassahun, who works at Awsad, said “victim blaming” is prevalent and harmful in society.

 

“Most of the abuse victims we treat at the centre were hurt by people close to them, especially family members,” she said. “Ethiopian society tends to cover up the abuse, with victims often blamed for having ‘loose morals’ or for somewhat triggering the abuser.”

 

“Victim-blaming [and the] fact that many of the abusers are sole breadwinners in households adds another layer of trauma to the psychological and physical scars victims endure.”

 

But there is a positive shift.

 

Lensi noted that domestic abuse is being increasingly reported by survivors and witnesses.

 

Awsad trains law enforcement officials on how to handle abuse cases and offers workshops in raising awareness and battling stigma in community centres, religious institutes and at schools.