PRESS RELEASE ON BEHALF OF 1000 WOMEN TRUST: 10TH OCTOBER 2024
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
‘Eight bride burnings in Free State in 2024 an indication of disturbing trend’
Eight women were killed through bride burnings by jealous husbands or boyfriends in the Free State in the first nine months of 2024, an indication that this brutal femicide is becoming a disturbing trend, and government will have to deal with it decisively, said Tina Thiart, co-founder of 1000 Women Trust, a women-led organization creating awareness of gender-based violence in South Africa.
1000 Women Trust regularly hosts trauma training in Bloemfontein for members of the community and is conducting anti-bully courses in several hundred Free State Schools.
“We are deeply disturbed and concerned by the brutal killings of women in the Free State by their husbands or boyfriends through what is commonly known as bride burnings,” said Thiart. “In some of these cases, the killer did not want the woman to end a toxic relationship and he falsely accused her of infidelity,” Thiart said.
“These so-called bride burnings have also now spilled over to other provinces. On Saturday 5th October, a woman was set alight and killed by her boyfriend in Tembisa,” Thiart added.
“These bride burnings are not related to dowry death (common in the Indian subcontinent) where a woman is murdered by her husband or his family for her family’s refusal to pay additional dowry. These bride burnings are purely motivated by anger and hate when a woman ends a relationship, or when a man raped a woman and he thinks that by burning her he can conceal ‘evidence’,” Thiart said.
“Government will have to demonstrate that they have the political will to deal with these femicides. Firstly, by denying the alleged offender bail, and secondly by double life sentences without early parole,” Thiart added.
“The femicide rate in South Africa just underlines that this is one of the most unsafe places in the world to be a woman. The murder rate for women has increased from 10 murders per 100 000 women in 2021 to 13 per 100 000 in 2023,” Thiart added.
In 2021, 3121 women were reported killed, an average of 8.6 per women a day. In 2023, that number increased to 3880, an average of 10.6 women a day.
The first quarter of 2024/2025 saw 966 women and 314 children murdered – a statistic that underscores the failure of our government to protect the most vulnerable members of our society. These figures translate to 11 women and three children being murdered every day, Thiart said.
“The scale of gender-based violence in South Africa – there are 170 sexual assaults per day – is so comprehensive that 1000 Women Trust is training 250 GBV Warriors in hotspots around the country to assist women affected by GBV in the first 24 hours after an attack,” Thiart said.
Thuto Setlogelo from the Free State Cooperate Governance and Traditional Affairs department, who also is a GBV-Warrior in collaboration with 1000 Women Trust, said in some cases the offenders who burned his bride beyond recognition, thought that he could conceal evidence by this heinous act. “We have heard that the offenders often used flammable substance like methylated acid to burn the victims,” she said.
Setlogelo said societal and cultural factors contribute to femicide. One of the underlying factors in the femicide in the Free State is patriarchal norms and gender inequality.
The objectification of women also plays a role, while the normalization of violence against women is another factor. “I believe the cultural acceptance of violence as a means of conflict resolution is a key factor in the killing of women by their intimate partners in South Africa,” Setlogelo said.
She said substance abuse, jealousy and insecurity as well as possessiveness and control are some of the relationship factors that could play a role in the brutal femicide by burning.
Press release compiled by Fanie Heyns on behalf of 1000 Women Trust. For more information, contact Tina Thiart on 073-2079079 or visit the website on www.1000women.co.za.
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Info@1000women.co.za
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The 1000 Women Trust
Registered Trust South Africa (IT738/2014)
NPO REGISTRATION NO: 163-132 NPO
PBO NO: 930 051 359
© Copyright 2023| All Rights Reserved. Designed by Ludet Digital for The 1000 Women Trust