Adolescent Girls' Legal Defense Fund
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Summary
Through strategically selected legal cases, the AGLDF attempts to address and rectify the unique and devastating human rights abuses faced by adolescent girls in Africa.
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Received $3,715 from 23 donations from people like:
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More Information About this Project
Project Needs and Beneficiaries
For too many girls the critical adolescent years are shaped by harmful experiences that are oftentimes irreversible and irreparable. As women they are often further subjected to violence, poverty and severe health problems as a result. Isolated and unsupported, these girls have little voice to demand their rights. The Fund supports and publicizes strategically selected legal cases, diversified to represent the most common and compelling human rights abuses of adolescent girls in Africa.
Activities
The AGLDF aims to address human rights issues at the systemic level, as well as remedy abuse at the individual level, and currently supports two girls' cases addressing forced marriage by abduction in Ethiopia and rape by teachers in Zambia.
Funding Information
Total Funding Received to Date: $3,715
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $16,285
Total Funding Goal: $20,000
Additional Documentation
This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc).
Resources
Why this Project is Important
Potential Long Term Impact
Equality Now believes that with the Adolescent Girls Legal Defense Fund we will foster an environment where laws that protect and promote the rights of women and girls are implemented and respected.
Project Message
Thank you for caring.Sometimes it seems like everything goes wrong and the world is upside down.Those are the times when you need a friend.I want to tell you how grateful I am that you are helping me.
- Adolescent girl, Plaintiff in Zambia rape case
When this Project was Updated
Last Updated
This project was last updated on July 11, 2008.
Date Added to GlobalGiving
This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on May 19, 2008.
Latest Update from the Field
High Court Decision in Zambia Case
By Equality Now - Press Release, July 11, 2008 06:15 PM
On 30 June 2008, the High Court of Zambia reached a groundbreaking decision in favor of a girl known as R.M. who was raped by her teacher at age 13. International human rights organization Equality Now has been actively involved in advocacy on behalf of R.M. The organization commends Judge Phillip Musonda for his landmark decision, which will have far-reaching implications in ensuring protection for girls from teacher rape and justice for girls who are raped by their teachers, a phenomenon not uncommon in Zambia and other countries.
In February 2006, R.M., aged 13, had requested her school papers from her teacher Edward Hakasenke. Hakasenke did not bring the papers to school despite reminders on three separate occasions, then inviting R.M. to collect the papers in his home where he raped her. R.M. was afraid to talk about the incident with anyone at first. She later developed a sexually transmitted infection as a result of the rape and needed help. She confided in two teachers who informed her aunt, who then brought the matter to the attention of the Headmaster. Hakasenke told the Headmaster that R.M. was his girlfriend. He later went into hiding and was subsequently detained by the police but only briefly and has not been charged with a criminal offense. At the meeting, the Headmaster told Hakasenke that he had been warned before, referring to a prior relationship with another girl in the school.
In March 2006, through her guardian (aunt), Petronella Mwamba and represented by pro bono counsel Kelvin Bwalya, R.M. filed a historic civil suit in Zambia. She called for accountability not just from the rapist but also from her school and from the Ministry of Education. R.M. claimed damages from Hakasenke for personal injury and emotional distress. She also demanded that the school be held accountable for negligence noting that the Headmaster knew that Hakasenke had a history of sexually abusing his students in the school yet had not taken steps to prevent further incidents and effectively protect the girls. R.M. had wanted her case to set a legal precedent so that girls in Zambia will have protection and girls raped by their teachers will have meaningful recourse. To this end her lawsuit called on the Ministry of Education to issue preventive guidelines.
On 30 June 2008, Judge Philip Musonda of the High Court in Lusaka issued his decision awarding R.M. damages worth K45,000,000. Calling the failure of the police to prosecute Hakasenke a dereliction of duty, the judge also referred the case to the Director of Public Prosecutions for a possible criminal prosecution. He further urged the Ministry of Education to set regulations, which may stem such acts. Expanding on the national significance of this case Faiza Jama Mohamed, Equality Nows Africa Regional Director explained, Although student rape by teachers is common not only in Zambia but regionally, it is still not acknowledged as an issue of wide public concern. We hope this remarkable decision will raise much needed awareness and generate action. We urge the Director of Public Prosecutions to advance a criminal case against Hakasenke. These steps would prove that the Zambian government will no longer tolerate the rape of students by their teachers. Another noteworthy element in this decision is that it cites and incorporates the standards set in the African Unions Protocol on the Rights of Women in Africa, which Zambia ratified on 2 May 2006.
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