Father of Tsholotsho nine-year-old girl’s child finally identified




Auxillia Mnangagwa gives a motherly embrace to the then pregnant 9-year-old girl in Bulawayo . - Picture taken by Innocent Makawa
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THE nine-year-old girl from Tsholotsho who recently gave birth was impregnated by her 13-year-old cousin, DNA tests have revealed.

Police have confirmed the development on Twitter.

“DNA results obtained from the National University of Science and Technology (Nust) on 25 November 2022, in connection with the paternity of the nine-year-old girl’s child have established that the victim’s cousin brother (13) is the father,” tweeted the police.

The two children have since been scheduled to go for counseling.

Teacher and Parents

Meanwhile, Vice President Constantino Chiwenga has urged parents and teachers to take a leading role in educating children about sexual abuse as a way of curbing the disturbing surge in sexual abuse cases.

In just a month two shocking cases of child sexual abuse have been reported. A nine-year-old girl from Tsholotsho recently became the youngest mother in the country after giving birth to a baby girl at the United Bulawayo Hospitals through Caesarean section. As the nation was struggling to come to terms with the gross sexual abuse of a minor, it received news that police had arrested two 17-year-old boys for impregnating a nine-year-old girl in Bindura.

The victim, a Grade Three pupil, is at Bindura Hospital.

A month ago, a 15-year-old girl from Norton died while giving birth at a church shrine in Bikita.

The tragedy is reminiscent of the case of 14-year-old Anna Machaya, who died while giving birth in Marange in July last year.
The Government, Chiwenga said, is worried that sexual abuse cases are on the rise in the country.

He was addressing school children, Government officials and people from different churches gathered for the final 2022 Jikinya Dance Festival held at the Winery Convention Centre in Gweru yesterday.

“Parents and teachers should take a leading role in educating children about sexual abuse at home and at school as one way of curbing the surge in sexual abuse incidences,” said the Vice President.

He said children who are taught about preventing sexual abuse at home or at school are more likely to report sexual abuse.

“If the abuse is taking place at home, the child must be able to tell the teachers and if it is happening at school, the child must be able to tell the parents. So at home parents must teach their children about this matter and teachers at school must do the same,” said Chiwenga.

He said it was unfortunate that some women and men see wives and husbands in young girls and boys.
Acting President Chiwenga said the culture of tolerating sugar daddies and sugar mummies should also come to an end.

“Children please, I urge you to come out in the open and report if you are facing abuse at home or at school,” he said.
Acting President Chiwenga, who is also the Minister of Health and Child Care, warned would-be abusers saying the

Government is looking at ensuring that child abusers are punished severely.

“I am giving everyone who shall be found on the wrong side of the law a stern warning because they will be given harsh sentences to deter would-be offenders. As I speak, the Government is working on legislation that will promote stiffer penalties,” he said.

The Vice President said drug and substance abuse was also affecting communities.

“This scourge has undesirable adverse effects on the individual, family, community and national well-being. In particular, the country has, of late, witnessed sad developments in relation to cases of rape and sexual abuse,” he said.

Chiwenga hailed the festival which he said is the biggest dance programme for primary schools run by the National Arts Council of Zimbabwe in partnership with the National Association of Primary Heads.

“This programme runs as a competition, with schools participating from all the country’s 10 administrative provinces. It is one great example of child participation in activities related to the arts and culture. The festival gives a platform to showcase various traditional dances from different communities, revealing cultural diversity in the country.

“Further, the festival promotes unity and social cohesion among children of diverse backgrounds and upbringing. The hosting of this festival is important as it gives participating children, despite their regions, an opportunity to perform and appreciate our various Zimbabwean cultures through dance. The dances performed reflect authentic traditional aspects of specific ethnic, religious, or cultural groups in Zimbabwe,” he said.

Vice President Constantino Chiwenga congratulates Lwendulo primary school pupil Prosper Nyoni with Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation Kirsty Coventry
Vice President Constantino Chiwenga congratulates Lwendulo primary school pupil Prosper Nyoni with Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation Kirsty Coventry

The theme for this year’s festival is: “Building Zimbabwe through Dance, Our Heritage is Our Identity”.

Chiwenga said the theme encourages communities to adopt safeguarding measures through dance so that every Zimbabwean appreciates and continues to foster the value of spreading cultural values from generation to generation.

He said the communities and schools have the responsibility to hand down this very important aspect of life in its completeness to school children who are the future.

“I note with pride that Jikinya has thrived over the years in showcasing this rich and diverse ethnic heritage of our Zimbabwean society through song and dance. This makes the festival a practical vehicle for conserving and promoting the nation’s living legacy. Over and above that, it builds an audience for the consumption of our arts and culture as commodities.

“Apart from training children in dance techniques, the Jikinya Dance Festival becomes a significant community initiative that supports economic benefits associated with heritage, given that it is promoting creativity within communities. The manufacturers and sales agents for these costumes and props that we see in use today also enjoy the same economic benefit,” he said.

Chiwenga said the Government, through the Ministries of Youth, Sport, Arts, and Recreation as well as Primary and Secondary Education, will continue to support the festival.

“The festival dovetails with the goals of the National Development Strategy (NDS 1, which is a tool to achieve Vision 2030, as pronounced by President Mnangagwa. It is bringing broad-based transformation, creating new wealth and expanding horizons of economic opportunities for all Zimbabweans, leaving no one and no place behind,” he said.