Sixteen years ago, Fezekile Ntsukela Kuzwayo—known as “Khwezi”—became a symbol of both courage and systemic failure in South Africa. In 2005, she accused then-Deputy President Jacob Zuma of rape, thrusting herself into a legal and political storm that would expose the nation’s deep fissures around gender, power, and justice.
The 2006 trial, which ended in Zuma’s acquittal, was less about the truth of Khwezi’s allegations and more about the spectacle surrounding them. Her identity was dissected in public, her motives questioned, and her trauma weaponized. The case laid bare how South Africa’s legal and social systems often retraumatize survivors, particularly when their accusers wield power.
Even after the trial, Khwezi faced relentless backlash—online harassment, public shaming, and the erasure of her humanity. She was reduced to a political footnote rather than acknowledged as a woman who dared to challenge one of the country’s most powerful men.
Her death in 2016, after years of illness, left her quest for justice unresolved. Yet her story remains a searing indictment of a society that claims to champion equality but still silences survivors. Khwezi’s case mirrors countless others where women are disbelieved, shamed, or abandoned by the systems meant to protect them.
As South Africa reflects on her legacy, urgent questions persist: Why do survivors still struggle to be heard? When will the powerful be held accountable? And how long must women wait for a justice system that sees them as more than collateral damage in political battles?
Khwezi’s name endures not just as a memory of injustice, but as a call to action—one that demands systemic change, solidarity with survivors, and an end to the culture that sacrifices them on the altars of power and patriarchy. The real test of her legacy is whether South Africa will finally listen.