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'The past 12 months since the passing of Uyinene have not been easy for us'

In Cape Town, flowers and ribbons have appeared outside the Clareinch Post Office where Uyinene Mrwetyana was raped and murdered, as the community prepares to mark the first anniversary of her death tomorrow.

UCT student Uyinene Mrwetyana was raped and murdered at Clareinch Post Office in Cape Town on August 24 2019.
UCT student Uyinene Mrwetyana was raped and murdered at Clareinch Post Office in Cape Town on August 24 2019. (Facebook/Zuki Lamani)

In Cape Town, flowers and ribbons have appeared outside the Clareinch Post Office where Uyinene Mrwetyana was raped and murdered, as the community prepares to mark the first anniversary of her death tomorrow.

For her mother Noma, the anniversary of the death of her daughter - 19 years old and a student at the University of Cape Town at the time - is just the latest painful reminder of her loss.

Flowers and ribbons outside the Clareinch Post Office in Claremont for Uyinene Mrwetyana, where the 19-year-old University of Cape Town student was tortured, raped and murdered on August 24 2019.
Flowers and ribbons outside the Clareinch Post Office in Claremont for Uyinene Mrwetyana, where the 19-year-old University of Cape Town student was tortured, raped and murdered on August 24 2019. (ESA ALEXANDER/SUNDAY TIMES​)

"The past 12 months since the passing of Uyi have not been easy for us as a family," she said. "The period has been characterised by countless sleepless nights… a mixed bag of emotions ranging from hurt and sadness to anger and frustration.

"However, we have realised that this is a lifetime experience we can never take away. By the grace of God and the support we received from people from all walks of life, there has been a sense of comfort."

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Flowers and ribbons outside the Clareinch Post Office in Claremont for Uyinene Mrwetyana, where the 19-year-old University of Cape Town student was tortured, raped and murdered on August 24 2019.
Flowers and ribbons outside the Clareinch Post Office in Claremont for Uyinene Mrwetyana, where the 19-year-old University of Cape Town student was tortured, raped and murdered on August 24 2019. (ESA ALEXANDER/SUNDAY TIMES​)

Noma said continuing cases of gender-based violence, in spite of the outpouring of anger that followed her daughter's murder by Post Office clerk Luyanda Botha, were disheartening.

"It seems we are fighting a losing battle," she said. "When shall enough be enough? It seems like there is no concerted effort from government to curb this crime."

Flowers and ribbons outside the Clareinch Post Office in Claremont, where a 19-year-old University of Cape Town student Uyinene Mretyana was tortured, raped and murdered on August 24 2019.
Flowers and ribbons outside the Clareinch Post Office in Claremont, where a 19-year-old University of Cape Town student Uyinene Mretyana was tortured, raped and murdered on August 24 2019. (ESA ALEXANDER/SUNDAY TIMES​)

Professor Shanaaz Mathews, a femicide expert in the health sciences faculty at UCT and director of the Children's Institute, said progress has been made since Mrwetyana's murder - but it has been slow.

Results from a femicide study by the South African Medical Research Council suggest cases over a ten-year period are not declining.

A R1.6bn "emergency response plan" adopted by the government after

Mrwetyana's highly publicised murder was "meant to address both prevention and response to gender-based violence [GBV], but tracking how this money was spent has been very difficult," said Mathews.

People putting flowers, ribbons and wrote messages outside the Clareinch Post Office in Claremont for Uyinene Mrwetyana, where the 19-year-old University of Cape Town student was tortured, raped and murdered on August 24 2019.
People putting flowers, ribbons and wrote messages outside the Clareinch Post Office in Claremont for Uyinene Mrwetyana, where the 19-year-old University of Cape Town student was tortured, raped and murdered on August 24 2019. (ESA ALEXANDER/SUNDAY TIMES​)

In April, President Cyril Ramaphosa signed off on a national strategic plan on GBV, but, said Mathews, "unless the plan is backed by resources and implementation of the plan is monitored by civil society, it will not have the desired effect".

For Leilani Kuter, who has raised more than R250,000 to support and empower rape survivors, the issue is particularly personal.

• 3 life sentences handed to Luyanda Botha in November 2019 for Uyinene Mrwetyana’s rape and murder

• 25 years Botha must serve in prison before being eligible for parole

—  in numbers

Kuter, 46, was raped, strangled and left for dead when she was 18 and living at a church youth centre in Pretoria.

"When the police finally arrived they explained it was the sixth rape case reported in the area in just one week," she said. 

"The police were very nonchalant about the rape. Speaking to me, it was as if they were asking me how I liked my eggs done."

Last year, Kuter walked 730km to raise R250,000 for rape survivors. On September 1, the anniversary of her attack, she plans to begin a 450km, 16-day walk to raise more money.

"Every step of my 2020 challenge will be taken in defiance of systemic violence against women, men and children, in celebration of our collective survival spirit. I hope the public will get behind me," she said.


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