WUNRN
UN Special Rapporteur on Violence
Against Women stated after her recent Mission to Papua New Guinea: “I was shocked to witness the brutality of the assaults
perpetrated against suspected sorcerers, which in many cases include torture,
rape, mutilations and murder. Any misfortune or death within the community can
be used as an excuse to accuse such person of being a sorcerer,” SR VAW Manjoo
said.
PAPUA NEW GUINEA - SEXUAL VIOLENCE
& BELIEFS IN WITCHCRAFT & SORCERY INCREASE HIV RISK OF WOMEN
Photo: David
Swanson/IRIN
According to the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), PNG
accounts for most of the 30,000 reported cases of people living with HIV in the
Pacific region, around 59 percent of which are women.
“This might be due to most HIV surveillance data coming from antenatal clinics
where pregnant women are tested, a [genuine] high incidence among women, or
both,” Stuart Watson, UNAIDS country director told IRIN.
PNG’s HIV prevalence
of 0.9 percent is the highest among Pacific region countries.
Violence contributing to
HIV
However, gender inequality is proving a major driver in the spread of HIV. “The
low status of women in the community makes them prone to violence - sexual and
otherwise,” Watson said.
Gender-based violence
is widespread among the country’s 6.5 million ethnically divided inhabitants.
The PNG Law Reform Commission reported that 70 percent of women had been
physically abused by their husbands, and in some parts of the country the
number reaches 100 percent.
Human Rights Watch (HRW)
estimated that 50 percent of women in PNG have experienced forced sex in their
lifetime.
Abused girls at higher
risk of HIV
A UNAIDS study found strong links between gender-based violence and HIV infection,
and noted that the first sexual encounter of many girls was forced. “These
circumstances make it extremely difficult to negotiate condom use. The trauma
of experiencing abuse usually sets off a pattern of unsafe sexual practices,”
Watson said.
The report also found that women who had been sexually abused as
children, or experienced sexual abuse by an intimate partner, were
twice as likely to test positive for HIV than those who had not.
Adding to the HIV risk that women are exposed to, it is common practice for men
to have multiple sexual partners and wives. “Polygamy is an accepted practice,”
said Ume Wainetti, head of the Family Sexual Violence Centre (FSVC) in PNG.
“Older men take on a younger bride because they think she is “clean” [free of
HIV infection]. “Some girls also become victims of gang rapes, known as
‘line-ups’,” Wainetti said.
Witchcraft and other
cultural practices
Human rights watchdog Amnesty
International reported that “puri-puri” or “sanguma”, a traditional
belief in witchcraft and magic, is widely practised in remote communities and
highland provinces, and is often “a pretext for brutal acts of violence against
women who are accused of being a witch and spreading HIV.”
“Sorcery is still practiced,” said John [not his real name], an office employee
in the capital, Port Moresby. “People buy spells to avenge transgressions, or
if someone gets sick and they don’t know how to explain it, they say it is due
to sorcery - it’s a much easier explanation for many. Sometimes you need
someone to blame [for a death].”
The Amnesty report also noted that women are six times more likely to be
accused of witchcraft than men. Under the 1971 Sorcery Act of PNG, it is a
criminal act punishable by up to two years in prison.
The UN Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women, Rashida Manjoo, ended her
week-long visit to the country in March by calling for the government to repeal
the act.
“I was shocked to witness the brutality of the assaults perpetrated against
suspected sorcerers, which in many cases include torture, rape, mutilations and
murder. Any misfortune or death within the community can be used as an excuse
to accuse such person of being a sorcerer,” Manjoo said.
Watson pointed out that “The belief in sorcery makes for little health-seeking
behaviour, and this makes matters worse, especially for women.”
According to Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID), HIV is
one of the biggest developmental challenges facing this mineral-rich nation.
If HIV continues to spread at its current rate, AusAID
estimates that over half a million Papua New Guineans will be living with HIV
by 2025.