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One woman’s fight to ensure justice for child victims of abuse in Malawi

image Magistrate Tembenu: My dream to have a place where victims can be counselled

Malawi’s justice system, like those in many other African nations, was designed to punish offenders, not to protect the victims. When these victims are children, this lack of protection can have distressing, if not catastrophic, results.

 

The Chief Magistrate at the Blantyre Child Justice Court, Esmie Tembenu, hopes to improve this system. She has made it her life’s work to ensure that child victims of abuse get the justice they deserve.

 

Ms. Tembenu’s court offers a glimpse of a better future. All her cases involving child victims are conducted with the help of a video camera, and access is restricted to relatives, witnesses, the accused and court officers.

 “The child sits in a counselling room with a parent or guardian,” she says. “Evidence is taken by video and relayed into the courtroom.  The child talks freely to the counsellor, sometimes not even knowing that the testimony is being heard in court.”

‘It hurts me to see them suffer‘

UNICEF is supporting the establishment of similar courts throughout Malawi. So far, three are in operation, with plans to set up another in the capital, Lilongwe.

Ms. Tembenu’s efforts have reached beyond the court precinct. She is fighting to establish a transit centre, or safe house, to accommodate girls fleeing from abusive situations.

“I would like see a safe house built near the court,” she says. “Sometimes I have had fleeing children turn up at my house at midnight. I welcome them, but at the same time, I cannot keep them forever.”

The absence of safe houses has, at times, left Ms. Tembenu with no alternative but to send a child to prison for his or her own safety.

“It hurts me to see them suffer in this way,” she says. “It is my dream to have a place where victims, especially girls, can be taken care of, protected and counselled.”

Expanding support for child victims

Efforts to combat child abuse in Malawi increased with the launch, in June 2007, of a multimedia campaign to stop child abuse.

The ‘Stop Child Abuse’ campaign has targeted policy makers and service providers through radio and television messages, billboards and more than 100,000 leaflets, as well as fact sheets, posters and handbooks.

UNICEF has also assisted Malawi police in responding to child victims of abuse by training police officers in play therapy, which helps children narrate their experiences without the risk of worsening the emotional and psychological impact.

More than 400 community child protection workers are working to identify victims of abuse and refer them to the relevant authorities. These workers are at the vanguard of preventing child abuse, educating communities and empowering children to avoid abusive situations.

If their efforts occasionally fail, they can count on people like Ms. Tembenu to ensure that the children receive the justice they deserve.__UNICEF

Comments (6 posted):

ufulu on 28 August, 2008 12:16:25
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This is a commendable job. The rights of children must be safeguarded, and * am happy that democratic institutions (courts and govt depts) are working together in this way. Ndangodabwa kuti anzanga owerenga nkhaniyi sananenepo kanthu. Mukuopa kulaula bwalo? Kapena akudikira wina wandale agwirire kaye mwana? Nanga wogwirira mwanayo bwanji sakumuzenga mlandu?
leah on 28 August, 2008 02:22:52
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THATS AGOOD IDEA
Caddon Mapwiya on 28 August, 2008 08:13:27
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Mai Tembenu is a fighter. and the fight she has just engaged is commendable. matters of child abuse are part and parcel of her blood. having interacted with the woman in 2005 when she was taking up the post at SOCHE COURT...and when she narrated what her own close relative..girl child..went through when she was working in mangochi * realised the woman will win the battle against child abuse...you have my moral support madame Tembenu..
CHIPHAMASO SAMBAJUMI on 29 August, 2008 06:56:35
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Fighter wake wachani mai, zikamayamba ngati za nzeru mukudziwa kuti kukubwera chithumba penepake, anthu akuba inu mumadyera mu plann ngati omwewa, AAAH SHAME THE DEVIL WHO CAN BE SEEN ALIVE, BUT IS DEAD.

Think of advocates, had good plans in place, but where is AIDS today? its in your family and among those advocates.

So what about Victims? NO NO plsease tell me the truth mama.
namwali on 29 August, 2008 07:53:57
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BRAVO MAI TEMBENU.GOD BLESS YOU FOR WHAT YOU ARE DOING.YOU ARE A HERO.
on 30 August, 2008 02:49:00
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what u trying to say mr or mrs chimpamso if that am correct,u supporting them dirty people or wat.......eeee what?
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