Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 17 December 2025

The topic of Gender Parity has been ongoing for decades. Over the years, there has been a substantial transformation in the inclusion of women in building economies, spanning politics, economics, technology, and other sectors. A plethora of women have managed to create platforms for change, a change that matters!

As women expand their presence, contributing to GDP and positively impacting lives, the long-neglected sensitive issue of gender-based violence and femicide (GBVF) continues to demand urgent attention. In South Africa, where crime is pervasive, it is important to interrogate the factors driving the surge in gender-based violence. Some of the most common factors that exacerbated GBVF cases are: the normalised patriarchal norms that perpetuate violence against women and girls, social violence dating back to the Apartheid period, lack of education, gangsterism, drug abuse, a weak legal system, as well as socio-economic inequality and indigence.

Gender-based violence is an act of violence directed at a person based on their gender. On the other hand, femicide is more direct and gender specific; it is the annihilation (killing) of women, especially because of their sexual orientation. The fierce activism towards the curbing of GBVF is ancient, with modern activism dating back to the 1970s.

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On a global scale, prominent women such as Elizabeth C. Stanton were among the first to pave the way for women’s rights activism. In South Africa, women like Lillian Ngoyi, a pioneering women’s rights activist and anti-apartheid leader, as well as Sally Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s first president’s wife.

Let us take a moment to reflect on how far women are willing to go in their pursuit of a safer and better world. On 21st November 2025, a day of pain and fury for millions of women in South Africa, they took to the streets in protest against Gender-Based Violence and Femicide (GBVF). Led by the Women for Change group ahead of the G20 summit, they demanded it be declared a national disaster and called on all women and allies worldwide to join in “Women’s Shut Down,” an enormous protest designed to show the world that women matter.

The movement received strong support from the United Nations Women (UN Women) ahead of the 16 Days of Activism, an annual international campaign against GBVF. The G20 summit took place from 22nd to 23rd November 2025, in Johannesburg, South Africa, where world leaders gathered to discuss global challenges, focusing on themes such as Solidarity, Sustainability, and Equality. The President of South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa, described GBVF as a “Second Pandemic”, citing the continued rise in such cases.

He noted that GBVF will be recognised as “a crisis that needs to be addressed”. Following Ramaphosa’s remarks at the G20 summit, online users were relieved, and while many had mixed feelings about it, they still demanded action and not just words. On a global scale, the number of GBVF cases is escalating inexplicably.

While browsing through the database of recorded and known cases of GBVF in South Africa, I discovered that to date, there are over 13,000 cases of sexual offences and attempts recorded annually, according to the South African Police Services (SAPS). What about the unrecorded cases? The higher rates of GBV alone have records of just 1 out of 10 men who report such cases due to masculinity norms, stigmatisation and fear of emotional instability.

Most men are “silent victims”, as I choose to coin it, and that should be a concern as well. Is GBVF Rooted in Economic Glitches and Political Failure?” South Africa’s Apartheid period scarred millions of families, leaving the majority in dire poverty. The aftermath created a further drift, a change without change.

Reading through the pages of Dambisa Mayo’s book “Edge of Chaos” gave me a different perspective on economic growth. Even though the country shows a modest economic growth, the income inequality gap remains substantial, and this is due to poorly managed economic resources. I have explored the juxtaposition of economics and politics in shaping today’s GBVF cases.

The roots can be evidently traced to a negligent government system under pseudo democracy, even when we speak of representation, women taking up space in politics and socio-economics should have interests in making a difference, such that we do not remain on one point, even long after we are past the topic of inclusivity. High unemployment in South Africa and elsewhere fuels GBVF; a growing economy and strong, corruption-free governance could reduce cases by narrowing inequality.

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Originally published by ExpressMail Zimbabwe • December 17, 2025

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