Women in Zimbabwe are starting to venture out at night without fear of being arrested on prostitution charges after the Constitutional Court ruled it was illegal and sexist for police to indiscriminately arrest women on the streets and in public establishments.
Before the ruling, women out at night were frequently arrested on allegations of being prostitutes. According to Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, police had arrested up to 153 women on a single night. But men were not arrested on similar charges.
The court ruled on May 27 that the practice was discriminatory and deprived women of equal rights and the right to liberty.
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Police clampdowns often involved raiding drinking establishments at night to indiscriminately arrest women. Such dragnets had overtly sexist names such as "Operation It's Time to Get Married." At times, police officers would arrest every female patron leaving a bar while letting the men go free.
Officers regularly patrolled on bicycle, on foot and on horseback, targeting women as early as 7 pm in downtown Harare and nearby residential areas. Women who had nothing to do with prostitution were often arrested.
Winnet Shamuyarira remembers being arrested when she was an 18-year-old high school student while walking in the city center as she left a school-organized function, and again while leaving a pub with her boyfriend. The first time, the school headmaster intervened. The second, she paid a USD 20 fine to avoid harassment and sleeping in filthy police cells, she said.
Tawanda Zhuwarara, a lawyer who represented women in the Constitutional Court case, said: "It is absurd to suggest that in this day and age, females are banned from being at certain places at night; that only men should enjoy a night out while women stay at home."
The raids have been going on for decades in Zimbabwe.