
Audio By Carbonatix
Women allegedly raped by the security forces during night raids to suppress recent protests have been urged to report their cases to the police.
The information minister said only one attack has been officially reported despite numerous allegations, the state-run Herald newspaper reports.
The BBC has spoken to six women who said they were raped by soldiers.
Correspondents say there is widespread mistrust of the police, who were also involved in the crackdown on protests.
The state-funded Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission has accused soldiers of using "systematic torture" in the crackdown on protests that broke out a fortnight ago following a more than doubling in fuel prices. It has strongly criticised the authorities for using troops to quell demonstrations.
The BBC spoke to six women who had sought refuge at a safe house about their experiences during the night-time door-to-door raids by the security forces.
One of the women said: "They slapped me, then said they want to have sex with me. When I refused, they slapped me again. The first soldier had unprotected sex with me. Then the other one said, 'I want to do the same.'"
Information Minister Monica Mutsvangwa said the government did not condone and or tolerate "criminal behaviour by any member of society particularly those in positions of trust".
"All women, who were allegedly raped, are encouraged to come forward and report the cases to the Zimbabwe Republic Police Victim Friendly Unit, which can be found at every police station around the country," The Herald quotes her as saying in a statement.
"The unit is led by a female commissioner, hence, all affected women will be treated with empathy, compassion, respect and due care. Their safety will be guaranteed," she added.
Latest Stories
-
Dr. Dre joins Forbes billionaires list as second-richest hip-hop artist with $1 billion fortune
13 minutes -
Benin’s Finance Minister Wadagni seeks his own mandate in election
3 hours -
GNFS retrieves body of unidentified man from Asylum Down drain
4 hours -
CAF’s Motsepe to visit both Senegal and Morocco amid AFCON fallout
4 hours -
Edmond Boateng takes up secretary role at Honorary Consular Corps of Ghana
4 hours -
Armed men kill 20 and abduct others in northwestern Nigeria villages
4 hours -
Gambia appoints British barrister to prosecute gruesome Jammeh-era crimes
4 hours -
Girl group Flo on entering into their ‘bombastic, confident, strong’ era
4 hours -
Germany suspends military approval for long stays abroad for men under 45
5 hours -
Liverpool face uphill Champions League task after PSG thrashing in Paris
5 hours -
‘Ketamine Queen’ sentenced to 15 years in Matthew Perry overdose death
5 hours -
Nigeria begins mass trial of 500 terrorism suspects
5 hours -
Atletico Madrid stun 10-man Barcelona to seize Champions League semi-final advantage
5 hours -
Black Stars coach to be announced by next week – Sports Minister
6 hours -
Chiefs, queen mothers and principal elders of Odau group denounce ‘rebellious Etweresohene’, pledges allegiance to Okyenhene
6 hours