Linda is a survivor of violence, who suffered at the hands of her abusive husband. She now works for Medecins Sans Frontieres and brings hope to some victims and survivors of domestic violence in PNG.
Trigger warning: This post features explicit details of rape and violence that could be distressing for some readers.
Linda, a rape and family violence survivor from Papua New Guinea, writes:
Violence is huge problem in PNG. Lots of girls, children and women are facing it. I am one of them.
I was about 21-years-old, still in school. I had a boyfriend that my mum did not like, she was using abusive words to me I could not cope with it. So I ran away to the beach and fell asleep. I woke around 8pm with an unknown man inside me. I punched him and he left. I hid myself before walking back and said nothing to anyone. I felt bad and was too ashamed for having sex with a stranger. I hated my mum because of this and stayed away from my family.
I contracted an STI and had to drop out of school. So I decided to get married but was unsuccessful.
After some years I married according to local customs after I had known the man for a week. That’s how I experienced domestic violence. My partner was having another relationship and became so violent, abusing me physically and emotionally.
I stayed with him for three years. We would fight all the time. Sometimes fights occurred because I refused to have sex or refused sex without condom. He’d lock the doors and use anything in the house as a weapon to hurt me. Once he beat me with a radio and I had to get stitches at the nearest clinic. He was usually next to me and I could not say anything to nurses and doctors. Sometimes I could tell them that I fought with my husband but nothing happened.